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High court’s stance could spur immigration laws

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In Mississippi, a get-tough immigration bill passed the House earlier this year but died in a Senate committee. Its backers plan to try again next year, and hope for a Supreme Court ruling that gives them guidance.

“This just ensures to the taxpayers of Mississippi that when we pass the law, we won’t end up in a long court battle,” Republican Rep. Becky Currie said.

As in Mississippi, South Dakota lawmakers also have rejected a measure based on the Arizona law, but its sponsor, Republican Rep. Manny Steele of Sioux Falls, says he’s ready to try again.

“I would be excited to get another bill going back in there, according to what the Supreme Court decision is,” Steele said.

In Rhode Island, Rep. Peter Palumbo said he was pleased by the Supreme Court’s apparent support for allowing states to enforce immigration law.

“It’s tremendous,” said Palumbo, a Democrat who would like to empower the state police to help federal authorities with immigration enforcement.

In several states where neither major party has a monopoly on power – Iowa, Colorado, Montana and Kentucky, among them – lawmakers said the fate of any hardline immigration bill likely will depend on the outcome of state elections in November.

One of Kentucky’s leading critics of illegal immigration, Republican Rep. Stan Lee, said an Arizona-style bill has little chance of overcoming staunch opposition from the Democratic majority in the House.

“Even if the Supreme Court upholds all or virtually all of that, I don’t expect to pursue any of that type of legislation unless there’s a significant change in the makeup of the House,” Lee said. “The votes, as I’ve discovered, just aren’t there.”

In Minnesota, Republican Rep. Steve Drazkowski said he’ll consider proposing a bill modeled in part on the Arizona law but acknowledged that it could well be vetoed by Democratic Gov. Mark Dayton, whose term runs until 2014.

In Kansas, where Republicans dominate, GOP legislators are split over immigration, preventing action both on proposals to crack down on illegal immigration and a business-backed program to place some immigrants in hard-to-fill jobs in farming and other sectors.


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