Mexico is Suing Arizona

Arizona Law March - Associate Press
Arizona Law March - Associate Press
The Government of Mexico has announced that it will join the Obama Administration's legal crusade to have Arizona's new immigration law repealed.

Arizona’s new immigration law, SB1070, is set to go into effect July 29, 2010. Today Megyn Kelly, host of FOX News’ America Live, announced that the Mexican government has officially filed a suit in Arizona State Court challenging the new law.

This announcement comes just one week after President Obama told Sen. John Kyle (R-AZ) that he would not secure the Mexican border because Democrats would lose it as a bargaining chip against Republicans, who he feared would then not support a future comprehensive Immigration Reform Bill (amnesty).

Polls taken since the April passage of the Arizona Bill have shown consistently that at least 60% of Americans support the bill. A PEW Research Poll taken May 9, 2010 showed 73% of Americans approved of requiring people to produce documents verifying their legal status, 67% approved of detainment of anyone unable to prove their immigration status and 62% approved of letting police question anyone they think might be an illegal.

The Arizona Law specifically prohibits racial profiling of any kind and only allows the police to ask individuals for identification if they are investigating a crime. Nevertheless President Obama plans to challenge the law.

However, three unanimous Supreme Court decisions and one longstanding federal law do not bode well for the president's challenge.

De Canas V. Bica (1975)

The US Supreme Court defined the federal government’s exclusive power of the “regulation of immigration” as "essentially the determination of who should and should not be admitted into the country, and the conditions under which a legal entrant may remain." Arizona has not assumed the authority to import and deport any person under SB1070.

In De Canas the court also found that states have the “police power” to enact and enforce laws that target illegal immigrants specifically when they adversely affect the lawful residents of the state and doing so is not an infringement on the federal government’s authority to enforce Immigration Law.

United States v. Brignoni-Ponce (1975)

The US Supreme Court, in a unanimous decision, found that Federal Officers monitoring areas near the US Border can stop vehicles based on any two of the following broad factors: Characteristics of the area, proximity to the border, traffic patterns, previous experience with illegal aliens, type or aspects of the vehicle, number of passengers, passenger’s clothes, passenger’s haircut and passenger’s race or ethnicity.

Justice Powell wrote in that opinion, “the public interest demands effective measures to prevent the illegal entry of aliens at the Mexican border… these aliens create significant economic and social problems, competing with citizens and legal residents for jobs, and generating extra demand for social services.”

Muehler v. Mena (2005)

The US Supreme Court ruled that it was not a violation of Isis Mena’s protection from “unreasonable searches and seizures”, guaranteed under the Fourth Amendment of the US Constitution, for a State police officer to inquire about her immigration status while detaining her. Chief Justice Rehnquist wrote in the court’s unanimous opinion that “the police officers did not need reasonable suspicion to ask Mena for her name, date and place of birth, or immigration status.”

Aliens and Nationality Act (1940)

Title 8 United States Code, Section 1304 (reviewed and reemphasized by Congress in 2005) requires all adults in the United States that are not legal residents to carry their immigration papers at all times:

Every alien, eighteen years of age and over, shall at all times carry with him and have in his personal possession any certificate of alien registration or alien registration receipt card issued to him pursuant to subsection (d) of this section. Any alien who fails to comply with the provisions of this subsection shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and shall upon conviction for each offense be fined not to exceed $100 or be imprisoned not more than thirty days, or both.

With respect to the Supremacy Clause, the crutch of the DOJ’s case to come against the Arizona Law; there is no difference between the new Arizona Immigration Law and a state law making possession of methamphetamines illegal and requiring its law enforcement officers to enforce that law in addition to requiring them to assist federal authorities in the federal enforcement of the like. If it were not the same every state law against the possession of methamphetamines would be challenged by drug dealers and declared unconstitutional as an “infringement on federal authority.”

Under a system of law like that no state would have the authority to require its law enforcement officers to cooperate in the enforcement of federal laws. State authorities could not charge people for murder, nor defend the civil liberties guaranteed in the US Constitution.

Despite being at odds with US Supreme Court precedent, federal statutes and a majority of Americans; Obama plans to push ahead with his controversial challenge to Arizona’s Immigration Law and Mexico will be standing beside him, literally.

Sources:

Davenport, Paul. Mexico Asks Court to Reject Arizona Immigration Law.

Montopoli, Brian. Senior Official: Obama Will Challenge Arizona Immigration Law.

Bob, Bob

Bobby Brown - Hello everyone. I've been gone for awhile but now I'm back. I appreciate all the comments. I studied Political Science and History at ...

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Comments

Jun 22, 2010 7:41 PM
Guest :
I hope that every American, regardless of where he lives, will stop and examine his conscience about this and other related incidents. This Nation was founded by men of many nations and backgrounds. It was founded on the principle that all men are created equal, and that the rights of every man are diminished when the rights of one man are threatened. All of us ought to have the right to be treated as he would wish to be treated, as one would wish his children to be treated, but this is not the case.

I know the proponents of this law say that the majority approves of this law, but the majority is not always right. Would women or non-whites have the vote if we listen to the majority of the day, would the non-whites have equal rights (and equal access to churches, housing, restaurants, hotels, retail stores, schools, colleges and yes water fountains) if we listen to the majority of the day? We all know the answer, a resounding, NO!

Today we are committed to a worldwide struggle to promote and protect the rights of all who wish to be free. In a time of domestic crisis men of good will and generosity should be able to unite regardless of party or politics and do what is right, not what is just popular with the majority. Some men comprehend discrimination by never have experiencing it in their lives, but the majority will only understand after it happens to them.
Jun 23, 2010 2:08 PM
Guest :
It is odd that there has been this big spike in right wing idiocy coming out of Arizona though. Texas has a higher background level of crazy and right now Arizona is like a supernova taking the attention. I wonder how long it will last.

Actually it isn't that strange. Arizona has been moving gradually towards the middle over the last twenty years. The population has doubled in that time and a big part of that spike wasn't old retirees who tended to be conservative, but a lot of younger families moving from blue states, etc. In 2008 McCain only received 53.4% of the vote here in Arizona, his sixth lowest vote total among the states he won. Now think about that, his home state was one of his least supportive states. Had McCain been from Texas, Florida, etc., he likely would have lost Arizona.

This state has a long history of very conservative, often racist politics and the supporters of those policies aren't happy that they are consistently losing ground to moderates and liberals (simply termed as liberals in their tirades). Because of how the state legislature is set up conservatives still have a major majority in both houses but, when Napolitano was governor, she vetoed a lot of their stupidity. In fact she set the record for vetoes in the history of the state. You take her away, bring in Brewer who is a wing-nut's wing-nut, and you see incredibly stupid legislation that was shut down by a reasonable governor make it out of the state house. At the same time you see an increase in non-conservative population as well as an increase in non-white population and the far white err, right is freaking out.
Jun 24, 2010 12:06 PM
Bobby Brown :
Thanks for the comments! We enjoy reading them and appreciate hearing differing points of view. Keep them coming :)


Jun 27, 2010 9:40 AM
Guest :
Does Mexico have standing to sue Arizona?
Jun 28, 2010 12:59 PM
Bobby Brown :
I am not an attorney yet. However, foreign states do have a right to bring law suits against individual states and the United States under certain circumstances. Article 3, Section 2 of the US Constitution mentions specifically that the US Supreme Court may hear cases between "a state, or the citizens thereof, and foreign states, citizens or subjects."

Standing in this particular suit, aside from any technicalities in the filing of it, I assume, will be determined by the courts based upon what, if any, actual damages Mexico is claiming it or its citizens have or will suffer due to the Arizona Statute.

If the court determines Mexico has a legitimate claim that its citizens (remember some citizens of Mexico do live and work legally in the US) have or will likely suffer some sort of damage due specifically to this law then the court may grant standing, if the court finds otherwise not then it will not.


Jul 31, 2010 11:03 AM
Guest :
All people on the planet have the right to be treated equally.
That means the wealth af all 300 million americans should be redistributed
to the other 7 billion people on the planet.
I wonder if guest would happily give away 95 % of everything he owns
so that all people on the planet could be treated as he would like to be treated.
Over 2 billion people on the planet live on a dollar a dat or less. 2 billion more
live on $2 a day
Jul 31, 2010 12:07 PM
Guest :
The nation was not founded by many men of many nations and backgrounds.
The people who founded this country were british.
The people who wrote and signed the decaration of independence and the constitution
were born in what is now the U.S. About 54 people signed the declaration of independence
only 3 were born in europe. The rest were born in the U.S.
They were also not all races and cultures.
Guest lives in a fantasy world.
Sep 28, 2010 12:48 PM
Guest :
This is rubbish it dnt even tell me wat i wanna kno
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