By CHRIS POWELL
Connecticut’s laws forbidding state and municipal police from cooperating with federal immigration authorities may not be unconstitutional, as is alleged by the lawsuit brought last week against state officials by the Trump administration, but the objective of those laws is exactly what the suit alleges: to turn Connecticut into a “sanctuary state.”
Raising taxes on the rich is just an excuse for plunder
Better education is impossible but maybe not fairer taxation
ICE should explain faster but protesters want ‘no nations’
That is, Connecticut is emphatically a state that welcomes and shields illegal immigrants from enforcement of federal law.
State Attorney General William Tong, named as a defendant in the lawsuit, responded: “Connecticut is not a ‘sanctuary’ state, whatever that means. This term is meaningless and has no basis in Connecticut law.”
Despite the attorney general’s demagoguery, everyone knows what the term means. The lawsuit may hinge on whether Connecticut’s extensive facilitation of illegal immigration and its refusal to assist federal immigration law enforcement are enough to constitute a violation of the U.S. Constitution’s supremacy clause. Constitutional or not, as a practical matter there is no doubt about what the state has been doing.
Governor Lamont, also named as a defendant, was more rational and precise than Tong. “Our laws do not prevent federal authorities from enforcing immigration law,” the governor said. “Rather, they reflect a longstanding principle: The federal government cannot require states to use their personnel or resources to carry out federal enforcement responsibilities.”
But that’s only part of this issue. Maybe someday a journalist will put a follow-up question to the governor: Exactly why should Connecticut forbid assisting federal immigration law enforcement if not to interfere with and nullify immigration law, much as the former segregationist states sought to nullify federal civil rights law?
Connecticut has not forbidden its police from assisting federal law enforcement in other respects. Assistance is usually granted routinely with everything else, though, as the governor notes, such assistance is not required. So what is so horrible particularly about helping the federal government control the country’s borders and regulate admission to the country? The danger of not regulating admission is obvious.
A third defendant responding to the lawsuit, New Haven MayorJustin Elicker, came closest to candor and honesty. “We’re proud to be a welcoming city and welcome immigrants,” the mayor said. “If people want to be a productive part of our community, we welcome people — period.”
The mayor seems to have faced no follow-up questions either, like: So do you welcome people who have entered or remained in the country illegally? Are you indifferent to whether people entering the country are first reviewed for suitability? Do you support open borders?
Such questions for the mayor are necessary only to clarify things for people new to the issue. For New Haven answered them in 2007 when it began issuing its Elm City Resident Card to illegal immigrants precisely to facilitate their violation of immigration law — to help them live in the country illegally.
With “we welcome people — period,” Mayor Elicker seemed to expect to foreclose discussion of the implications of city government’s position. But that position still invites many more questions.
How many more illegal immigrants — or, for that matter, legal immigrants as well — do New Haven city government and state government believe they can afford amid Connecticut’s desperate shortage of housing and the soaring costs of its schools, including the costs of educating thousands of children who don’t speak English and arrive without educational records?
How about the soaring costs of state government’s medical insurance for the poor and the financial strain on the state’s hospitals? How much more medical care for the indigent can Connecticut afford?
New Haven and Connecticut have not provided for these costs already, so how much money should be put aside for them, and should it come from raising taxes or reducing spending elsewhere? Which taxes and which spending?
Or is the objective of Connecticut’s open borders policy really to sustain the state’s representation in Congress and the Electoral College as the state continues to lose population relative to states that are glad to assist federal immigration law enforcement?
Chris Powell has written about Connecticut government and politics for many years. (CPowell@cox.net)