2013년 11월 22일 금요일

About 'john mccain immigration bill'|John McCain- Weak on Immigration







About 'john mccain immigration bill'|John McCain- Weak on Immigration








               John               McCain               appears               puzzled               by               the               recent               controversy               provoked               by               his               statements               blaming               Arizona's               devastating               wildfires               on               illegal               immigrants'               attempts               to               divert               law               enforcement               focus.

Over               1,500               people               remain               evacuated               from               their               places               of               residence,               but               the               sparseness               of               Arizona               has               made               damage               comparatively               mild.

McCain's               statements               are               in               conjunction               with               his               longstanding               belief               that               the               United               States               needs               a               "secure               border"               with               Mexico,               reports               Time.
               Immigration               is               a               contentious               issue               in               Arizona,               which               passed               the               controversial               SB               1070               last               year.

The               Senate               bill               allows               all               law               enforcement               officers               in               the               state,               including               state               and               local               officers,               to               check               the               immigration               or               residency               status               of               anyone               who,               under               the               doctrine               of               "reasonable               suspicion,"               appears               to               be               an               illegal               immigrant.

Those               found               to               be               illegal               immigrants               would               be               transferred               to               federal               authorities.
               The               bill               caused               a               wave               of               controversy               and               provoked               demonstrations               in               many               states.

While               some               legal               and               law               enforcement               personnel               within               Arizona               supported               the               bill,               most               others               appeared               to               view               it               as               excessive.

Critics               of               the               law               alleged               that               it               made               use               of               racial               profiling               and               turned               Arizona               into               a               "police               state,"               reports               AZCentral.
               The               bill               ended               up               being               gutted               by               federal               courts,               with               the               Ninth               Circuit               Court               of               Appeals               upholding               a               federal               district               court's               decision               to               block               parts               of               the               law.

Justices               concurred               that               Arizona               was               attempting               to               adopt               foreign               policy               powers               reserved               for               the               federal               government.

Arizona               Gov.

Jan               Brewer,               who               signed               the               bill               into               law               in               April               2010,               indicated               that               she               would               "battle               all               the               way               to               the               Supreme               Court,               if               necessary,"               according               to               the               Tucson               Sentinel.
               Most               prominent               politicians               appeared               to               be               against               the               bill               in               the               first               place,               with               Arizona               Congressman               Raul               Grijalva               leading               the               charge               with               a               press               release               from               his               Washington               office.

Many               gubernatorial               candidates               in               other               states,               however,               argued               in               favor               of               the               law               and               criticized               weak               federal               enforcement               of               immigration               laws.

Bills               similar               to               SB               1070               were               introduced               in               five               states,               with               Virginia               state               Sen.

John               Watkins               empathizing               with               Arizona               supporters               of               the               controversial               bill.

Perhaps               the               strongest               individual               detractor               of               the               bill,               President               Barack               Obama,               criticized               SB               1070               as               misguided               and               irresponsible,               reports               the               Phoenix               New               Times.
               This               year               the               bill,               and               the               state               of               Arizona,               was               once               again               embroiled               in               controversy               after               the               attempted               assassination               of               U.S.

Rep.

Gabrielle               Giffords               (D-Ariz.).

Many               argued               that               the               shooting               was               the               result               of               hatred               and               extremism               broiling               within               Arizona,               according               to               the               Huffington               Post,               intensified               by               the               issue               of               immigration.

In               the               wake               of               the               Giffords               trauma,               which               has               received               nationwide               attention,               further               immigration               drama               is               only               likely               to               spur               more               controversy.
               In               spite               of               the               well-documented               protests               and               condemnations               of               SB               1070,               both               by               politicos               and               average               citizens,               polling               results               tell               a               different               story.

A               Facebook               poll               by               a               Tucson               news               station               in               July               2010               revealed               67               percent               of               respondents               favored               the               bill.

A               more               formal               poll               revealed               55               percent               of               Americans               favored               SB               1070,               with               national               polls               by               both               CBS               and               CNN               having               similar               results.

Media               coverage               appeared               to               be               more               focused               on               higher-drama               protests               and               demonstrations               against               SB               1070               than               polls               that               favored               the               bill.

Critics               of               media               bias               against               SB               1070               felt               that               the               media               focused               more               on               image,               especially               foreign               policy               image,               instead               of               fact               and               overall               public               support.
               Illegal               immigration               will               definitely               remain               a               hot-button               issue               in               2012,               particularly               given               the               focus               on               Giffords'               recovery.

There               is               always               a               plethora               of               potent               emotion               surrounding               the               immigration               debate,               and               perhaps               such               emotion               is               approaching               a               fever               pitch:               Giffords,               many               allege,               was               targeted               due               to               her               criticism               of               SB               1070.

Her               tragic               story               will               undoubtedly               fuel               immigration               rhetoric               in               2012.

John               McCain's               controversial               comments,               however,               are               much               less               of               a               driving               force               of               rhetoric               and               are               perhaps               more               spurred               by               stress               and               emotion               over               the               ongoing               fires;               the               furor               will               die               down               as               the               fires               smolder               into               ashes.






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