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High court’s stance could spur immigration laws

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Miss. Rep. Becky Currie (right), an immigration reform advocate, confers Thursday with House Education Committee chairman John Moore at the Capitol in Jackson, Miss. (AP photo)

Emboldened by signals that the U.S. Supreme Court may uphold parts of Arizona’s immigration law, legislators and activists across the country say they are gearing up to push for similar get-tough measures in their states.

“We’re getting our national network ready to run with the ball, and saturate state legislatures with versions of the law,” said William Gheen, president of Americans for Legal Immigration. “We believe we can pass it in most states.”

That goal may be a stretch, but lawmakers in about a dozen states told The Associated Press they were interested in proposing Arizona-style laws if its key components are upheld by the Supreme Court. A ruling is expected in June on the Department of Justice’s appeal that the law conflicts with federal immigration policy.

Dan Stein, president of the Federation for American Immigration Reform, said he was encouraged that several justices suggested during Wednesday’s oral arguments that they are ready to let Arizona enforce the most controversial part of its law – a requirement that police officers check the immigration status of people they suspect are in the country illegally. Another provision allows suspected illegal immigrants to be arrested without warrants

“The justices sent a clear signal that there’s a huge zone for state action in this area,” Stein said. “There will be an enormous amount of energy spent in the next few months examining the full range of possibilities.”

For starters, a ruling in favor of Arizona’s Senate Bill 1070 would likely enable Alabama, Georgia, Indiana, South Carolina and Utah to move forward with comparable measures that were enacted but have been on hold pending the high court’s decision.

In Illinois, which has some of the most immigrant-friendly laws in the nation, Republican Rep. Randy Ramey has tried four times to propose an Arizona-style law but failed to get a measure out of committee. Heartened by the Supreme Court arguments, Ramey said he might try again despite the odds.

“It encourages me, but doesn’t mean anything will move here as long as Democrats are in charge,” he said. “They’ll just laugh at it.”

Lawmakers in such diverse states as Mississippi and Pennsylvania said they would be eager to follow the Arizona/Alabama model if the Supreme Court gives a green light.

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