Misericordia.
The word washes across the congregation at the tiny church, carried by
voices singing in Spanish.
Mercy.
Young girls, their long, shiny black hair covered in sheer white
doilies, sit close to each other in the pews
at Surprise Apostolic Assembly in suburban
Phoenix, Arizona, chattering and giggling
into their hands. Mothers and grandmothers,
their hair covered in scarves of black lace,
lean over and gently shush them. A handsome
young man with baby-smooth skin and
glistening hair neatly parted at the side
steps forward to the pulpit. Steve
Montenegro, the youth minister, beckons to
the congregation’s children, who gather at
his feet. He praises the little ones for
their innocence as their mothers snap photos
from the pews.
Steve’s father, José Roberto Montenegro,
the church’s pastor, delivers the sermon in
Spanish, as the son translates, switching
easily between the two languages. “Train up
a child in the way he should go: and when he
is old, he will not depart from it,” the
older Montenegro says, quoting from the book
of Proverbs.
In the early 1980s, when Steve was only a
baby, the Montenegro family fled from El
Salvador to the United States. With help
from the Apostolic Assembly, the refugees
applied for and received asylum on the basis
of their religion, making it possible for
Steve to become a U.S. citizen.[1]
In 2008, Steve Montenegro was elected to
the Arizona state house with strong
conservative support.[2]
Last
spring, he became the only Latino lawmaker
to cast a vote in favor of the Support Our
Law Enforcement and Safe Neighborhoods Act,
otherwise known as SB1070, the notorious
state law that requires state and local
police officers to check the immigration
status of anyone they arrest or suspect is
in the country illegally. The law places the
burden of proof on those questioned by the
police to prove they are in the country
legally; if they can’t, they will be
arrested and charged with trespassing. Known
informally as the Show Me Your Papers Law
or, more derisively, Driving While Brown, SB
1070’s stated purpose is to crack down on
the state’s estimated 460,000 undocumented
immigrants. As Arizona’s senate
president and the bill’s primary sponsor,
Republican Russell Pearce, wrote on his
website,
The fact is Arizona’s
motto is ‘Attrition by Enforcement’ and 90%
will self-deport. …[T]hose who say we need
reform (code word Amnesty), because we can’t
deport them all, [are] saying come on in
illegally, we don’t intend to enforce our
laws.[3]
April 23 was the anniversary of
Governor Jan Brewer’s signing of SB1070. Just a
few weeks before that, on April 11, the U.S. 9th
Circuit Court of Appeals upheld District Court
Judge Susan Bolton’s July 2010 injunction
against the enforcement of certain provisions of
SB1070, including those that require immigrants
to carry their papers at all times and police
officers to check suspects’ immigration status.
The 9th Circuit concluded that
there was sufficient evidence that these parts
of the law infringe on federal jurisdiction.
Pearce has vowed to appeal the decision to the
U.S. Supreme Court.[4]
Despite the injunction, the law’s impact
has been widely felt, across the state and
nationally. Other states are preparing similar
legislation, and immigrants with legal papers
and without are living in fear.
Pentecostal observers say that the Montenegros’ Apostolic Assembly
denomination, with its large Hispanic
membership, includes individuals of questionable
documentation, who would pay a heavy price for
their spiritual brother’s support of SB 1070.[5]
Yet, like his Tea Party colleagues, Montenegro has been an active
sponsor of a series of recently rejected
anti-immigration bills, which critics say were
even more draconian than SB1070. He was also the
prime sponsor of Arizona’s latest anti-abortion
law, signed by Brewer in March, which makes it a
crime to get an abortion because of the race or
gender of the fetus and requires minority women
to sign a document explaining their reasons for
seeking the procedure.[6]
When I interviewed him in September regarding his support for SB1070,
Montenegro declined to discuss how he was able
to reconcile his votes with his religious
beliefs and his church. “We don’t mix religion
and politics,” he told me. “If you’re working on
a story about what the religious experience has
to do with [the law], I don’t think that’s
fair.” He added that he and his family came to
the United States legally, and that people who
accuse him of being hypocritical are
stereotyping him. At a Tea Party rally
Montenegro summed up his position: “The fact
that I can speak in Spanish doesn’t
automatically make me a protax, open border
liberal hopelessly addicted to big government
spending. So today we send government a message:
don’t mess with my liberties, don’t mess with my
faith, and don’t mess with my wallet.”[7]
That a Spanish-speaking immigrant and Latino church leader is a major
supporter of SB1070 says much about the
disparate elements that came together to pass
the most restrictive anti-immigration law in the
country—an unhealthy brew of Wall Street greed,
political opportunism, and nativist fears.
The Mexican Financial Crisis, U.S. Banks,
and the Private Prison Industry
Today’s
debates about U.S. immigration policy have
roots in the December 1994 Mexican financial
panic. On the heels of NAFTA, Mexico emerged
nearly bankrupt because of bond debt to Wall
Street banks. The peso was devalued by forty
percent. The U.S. government pushed the
International Monetary Fund to give Mexico
money so it could put together a package to
pay its creditors, most of which were the
Wall Street banks.[8]
The IMF then contracted out the bailout loan
to the U.S. Treasury.[9]
Mark Fineman of the Los Angeles Times
reported, “Three weeks after it started
receiving one of the biggest and most
controversial credit packages in U.S.
history, the Mexican government has spent a
fifth of the $20 billion in promised U.S.
loans to pay off American insurance
companies, mutual fund investors, Wall
Street brokerage houses, Mexican banks and
the richest of Mexico’s rich.”[10]
To meet its
crushing debt to Wall Street, the Mexican
government increased interest rates at the
behest of the U.S. Treasury. The rates on
business and farm loans rose from an average
of eleven percent to 56 percent. Those on
credit-card debt went from seven percent to
61 percent. The rates on home loans
increased from
an average of
five percent to 75 percent.[11]
The impact on
Mexican citizens was devastating. Thousands
of farms and businesses, both large and
small, went bankrupt. Jobs disappeared, and
people could no longer support their
families. The economic hardships prompted a
wave of mass migration, as millions of men,
women, and children crossed Mexico’s
northern border seeking work.
The Private Prison Companies Get Involved
In December 2006, more than a thousand men
and women were arrested and detained in
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
raids at meat-packing plants across the U.S.
Instead of being charged with misdemeanors
such as the misuse of a social security
number—the U.S. practice since 1995—they
were charged with crimes that carry lengthy
prison sentences, such as falsifying
documents or identity theft. The charges
marked a significant shift in the
enforcement of federal immigration policy.[12]
As Peter Cervantes-Gautschi, the executive director of Enlace, a group
that helps low-wage workers develop and
strengthen their organizations, wrote in an
analysis for the Americas Program think tank,
the shift spelled good news for the for-profit
prison industry. Although the United States has
the highest incarceration rate in the world,
across the country, crime rates were down.[13]
Private prison corporations, no longer able to
keep their jails filled, had lost contracts and
shuttered doors.[14]
Now, however, wrote
Cervantes-Gautschi,
This single change in
enforcement of existing law created a potential
“market” of over 10 million new felons almost
overnight, multiplying the lucrative
incarceration market for the private prison
industry and sending a shock wave through
immigrant-related communities across the
country.[15]
A report by the Corrections Corporation
of America, the country’s largest for-profit
prison company, noted that “[e]xecutives believe
immigrant detention is their next big market.”
CCA, said the report, was expecting to bring in
“a significant portion of our revenues” from
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).[16]
Many of the same banking institutions that
profited from the Mexican financial crisis of
the 1990s, such as JP Morgan and the Bank of
America, are now investing heavily in the
private prison industry, enabling them once
again to profit from those who lost their jobs
and businesses following the Mexico bailout.[17]
Kris Kobach, Crusading Attorney
In 2002, Kris Kobach was a 33-year-old
advisor to U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft,
working in the Department of Justice’s Office of
Legal Counsel. There, he was “intimately
involved,” as he says, in writing a memo arguing
that local and state police have the power to
arrest undocumented immigrants for civil
violations of immigration law.[18]
Kobach’s memo directly contradicted opinions
issued by his office in 1989 and 1996, which
stated that only federal agents have that power,
and his memo never became official policy.
In 2003, he left the department, and a
year later, he was hired as senior counsel to
the Federation for American Immigration
Reform (FAIR), an organization that works to
curtail immigration, which the Southern Poverty
Law Center (SPLC) has identified as a White
nationalist hate group.[19]
In its report,
SPLC cites
John Tanton, FAIR’s founder, who wrote
that a clear “European-American majority” is
needed to protect American culture.[20]
Although Kobach’s Department of Justice
memo never went anywhere, Kobach uses it to
justify the authority of local law enforcement
in immigration matters. In a May 18, 2010,
article,
the
Washington Post
wrote that
“ [Kobach] … has cited the authority granted in
the 2002 memo as a basis for the legislation.”[21]—and
he is behind the anti-immigration laws that have
started popping up in towns across the country,
writing them and then defending them in court.
He has had limited success, however, in
selling his arguments to judges. In 2007, he was
brought in to defend a law in Hazleton,
Pennsylvania, in a case that heated up the
national anti-immigrant climate. Hazleton’s
municipal ordinance made it a crime for
landlords to rent to undocumented immigrants and
required all tenants to register with the city.
As Hazleton Mayor Lou Barletta said at the time,
Kobach intended to make the law “legally
bulletproof.”[22]
Nevertheless, in 2007, a federal district court
judge struck it down as unconstitutional. In
September 2010, the 3rd Circuit Court
of Appeals agreed with the lower court’s ruling
that immigration law falls under the
jurisdiction of the federal government. Hazleton
has appealed the decision to the U.S. Supreme
Court, which has remanded it back to the Third
Circuit. “Mr. Kobach’s experiments in pushing
immigration enforcement to states and
municipalities has real-world consequences,
fueling xenophobia and pitting neighbor against
neighbor,” said the Legal Director of the
Pennsylvania American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU), Witold Walczak, who argued the case.[23]
Last fall, Kobach was elected Kansas
secretary of state, running on a pledge to end
immigrant voter fraud—even though he provided no
credible evidence that this problem exists. He
cited one case, in which he claimed that someone
who had died in 1996 had voted in August 2010.
However, the Wichita Eagle found the
“dead” man outside his house raking leaves.[24]
Russell Pearce, FAIR, and ALEC
Both nativists and the private prison industry were at the center of
developing and passing SB1070;
Arizona’s Senator
Pearce has ties to both.
His connections to FAIR go back to at
least 2004, when he was the co-chairman of the
campaign for Proposition 200, a voter-approved
law that cut off benefits to undocumented
immigrants.[25]
The ballot initiative marked FAIR’s first foray
into Arizona politics, for which the
organization spent $500,000 in lobbying the
public.[26]
Certainly, FAIR and Kobach fingerprints
are all over SB1070, with its references to
pressuring undocumented immigrants to “self
deport” and to “attrition through enforcement,”
which come directly from FAIR’s talking points.[27]
Dan Pochoda, the legal director of the Arizona
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), points
out that the enforcement strategy, also embraced
by the Arizona Tea Party, is at the heart of all
of Kobach’s cases.[28]
Still, Kobach’s previous ordinances had “only
fiddled around” with giving local police
enforcement responsibility, says SPLC Director
of Research Heidi Beirich. “SB 1070 was a big
innovation,” she notes.[29]
Kobach did not return phone calls for
requests for an interview.
Pearce also has close connections to the
prison industry, due to his membership in the
American Legislative Enterprise Council
(ALEC), a nonprofit, private
membership
organization that develops “model legislation”
dedicated to advancing “free markets” and
“limited government” for state lawmakers.[30]
In addition to the
lawmakers, ALEC’s membership includes 200
corporations, who pay tens of thousands of
dollars for the privilege of gaining access to
the state officials. Both CCA
and Geo Group, another large private prison
company, are
corporate members of ALEC.[31]
Pearce is an ALEC lawmaker-member and
serves on the council’s Public Safety and
Elections Task Force—which also includes CCA
representatives. Pearce admits that he submitted
a draft to the task force of the bill that would
become SB1070 in December 2009.[32]
Kobach says he helped draft a version of the
law, likely the version that Pearce brought to
ALEC.[33]
A month after Pearce presented the draft
to the task force, the January-February edition
of Inside ALEC published a list of the
model legislation the council had approved at
its December States and Nation Policy Summit,
including this:
Resolution to
Enforce Our Immigration Laws and Secure Our
Borders Calls on states to enforce immigration
laws and end sanctuary policies.
Calls on law
enforcement officers to execute their authority
to arrest any person guilty of hiring,
harboring, or transporting illegal immigrants
and to turn over illegal immigrants to federal
authorities for removal from the United States.[34]
In March, Pearce introduced a bill into
the Arizona state legislature that was
practically identical to ALEC’s model
legislation.
For its part, CCA donated to the
campaigns of thirty of the bill’s 36 cosponsors
and hired a lobbyist to work the state capitol
on the bill’s behalf. Two of Governor Brewer’s
top advisors, Spokesman Paul Senseman and
Campaign Manager Chuck Coughlin, are former
lobbyists for the private prison industry.[35]
Tapping the Tea Party
Even though the forces that came together to pass SB1070, such as the
private prison industry and ALEC, are powerful,
neither group alone would have achieved such
success. The prison industry’s lobbying efforts
have been behind the scenes—in fact, it denies
any lobbying at all. Obtaining grassroots
support was crucial, and FAIR focused on
generating it, tapping into Arizona’s motivated
Tea Party movement.
FAIR set the stage for SB1070 with the
Proposition 200 campaign. Frank Sharry,
the executive director of America’s Voice, which
lobbies for comprehensive immigration reform,
said the
legislation restricting public benefits to those
who could not prove their immigration status,
was in fact symbolic. “Few undocumented workers
collect benefits, but [FAIR’s] strategy was to
mobilize their base,” Sharry said. “In some ways
[it became] the predecessor to the Tea Party.
[FAIR] used online organizing to build a pretty
formal cadre of activists around the country….
The anti-immigration movement has been able to
stir up the Republican base so that the
Republicans are scared of them in low-turnout
elections.”[36]
FAIR invested a half-million dollars in
the campaign, hiring signature gatherers and
mobilizing support with a misinformation
strategy, claiming (falsely) that undocumented
immigrants cost the state $1.3 billion a year.
To produce this number, a FAIR study included
$810 million the state spends on educating the
children of immigrants who are US citizens.[37]
The referendum campaign
fanned the flames of anti-immigrant fears.
“The Minutemen
vigilantes have diverted the attention of the
public and the media while their counterparts,
sporting suits and ties in the state capitol,
promote racist laws,” said Luis Herrera, an
organizer with the St. Peter’s Housing Committee
in San Francisco. “A war against immigrants and
people of color has been declared in Arizona.”[38]
Margot Vernes, a community activist and volunteer with Corazon del
Tucson, said that the White progressive
community was reticent about the racist
motivations of White nationalist movement, which
helped the anti-immigrant movement in the
long-term, setting the stage for the SB 1070
showdown.[39]
Proposition 200 passed with 56 percent of
the vote.[40]
For the next few years, as Prop. 200
faced legal challenges, FAIR’s legal arm, the
Immigration Reform Law Institute, headed by
Kobach, spent its time and resources trying to
institute anti-immigration policies at the local
level. After losing several high profile cases
such as the one in Hazleton, in 2009, Kobach and
FAIR turned their attention back to Arizona.
Governor Janet Napolitano had just been
appointed Secretary of Homeland Security.
Lieutenant Governor Jan Brewer, a staunch,
conservative supportive of anti-immigration
legislation, became the new governor, and Pearce
moved into the powerful position of head of the
Senate Appropriations Committee.[41]
“Given all that, with the local
ordinances held up in the courts, I suspect they
figured, ‘Hey we’ve got strong support in
Arizona,’” Sharry said. “Prop. 200 sowed the
seed for SB1070, because FAIR had gotten to know
Pearce at the time. They had gotten the
Republican establishment behind them.” He
continued,
There has been a
significant demographic change in America. The
White majority is getting increasingly fearful
that they have lost control and [Republicans]
have tapped into that fear. California is
already multi-ethnic. Arizona is next door and
next up. The White majority population there
thinks it’s losing out to the growth of the
Hispanic community and are reacting in a very
tribalistic way. FAIR and these groups are
pretty skillful at blowing the dog whistle of
demagoguery without being overtly racist.[42]
As evidence of the anti-immigrant groups’
success, Sharry points to the reversal of U.S.
Senator John McCain (R-AZ) on immigration
reform. In 2005, McCain worked with Senator Ted
Kennedy (D-MA) on a bipartisan plan that would
have increased border security but also granted
amnesty to illegal workers already in the
country. By 2008, in response to
anti-immigration activism, he changed his
position and endorsed strict border crackdowns
and blamed undocumented residents for “home
invasions and murders.”[43]
“This is less a policy issue than it is a
front on the culture war and in the partisan
political war,” Sharry said.
The Tea Party, emerging in the wake of
this anti-immigration fervor, embraced FAIR’s
talking points and ran with them. Politicians
like Montenegro curried favor with this
motivated constituency.
Tea party support has not waned. In February, the Tea Party Patriots, a
national umbrella group, held a so-called policy
summit in Phoenix. In its invitation, the group
wrote, “It will
also be our opportunity to support the citizens
of Arizona in their current political battles
that carry so many national implications.”[44]
The Prison Industry Cleans Up
Even now, before SB1070 has gone into
effect, there are twelve for-profit,
private prison and detention facilities in the
state of Arizona.
CCA holds the federal contract to house
detainees in Arizona who are suspected of
violating immigration laws. When someone
is arrested on suspicion of being in the country
illegally, the state or county must notify ICE,
which then has 48 hours to determine the
detainee’s status. Each day that CCA holds a
detainee in one of its facilities means an
additional payment, whether from the state,
county, or federal government.
According to Cervantes-Gautschi,
CCA currently
bills the Department of Homeland Security $11
million per month. “[CCA’s]
stated goal is to make as much money as they can
off detained immigrants,” he says.
[45]
SB1070 would expand the private prison industry’s market, effectively
turning state and local police officers into its
very own taxpayer-funded sales team. The new
trespassing offences created by the law carry a
maximum of twenty days in jail for a first
offense and thirty days for a second offense.
(The main difference between the ALEC model
legislation and the bill presented to Arizona
legislators was that in the ALEC version, there
was no maximum limit on how long a person could
be detained.) Private prisons would profit
handsomely from these sentencing guidelines—for
which the state would be required to pick up the
tab.
Although Pearce asserts that the law will reduce prison overcrowding,
even the Arizona legislature’s own fiscal
analysis predicts that it will bring greater
numbers of prisoners into the system, increasing
costs. The analysts admit, however, that they
cannot put a dollar figure on the cost increase,
because no one knows how many people will be
rounded up.[46]
In
absence of any credible figures, many are
turning to a study done by the Yuma County
Sheriff’s Department in 2006, in response to a
bill similar to SB1070 that would have rounded
up suspected undocumented immigrants, but that
never made it into law. Yuma is one of Arizona’s
fifteen counties, with a population of about
200,000. Sheriff Ralph E. Ogden estimated that
county law-enforcement agencies would have to
spend an addition $775,880 to $1,163,820 under
the law. Increased processing expenses and jail
costs would be between $21,195,600 and
$96,086,720.[47]
With these kinds of increased costs to the taxpayer, SB1070
clearly conflicts
with the Tea Party’s demand for smaller
government. Yet, the majority of the Tea Party
candidates don’t seem to recognize this.
The alliance between CCA and FAIR typifies the
ironies surrounding SB1070, since FAIR reaches
out to Tea Party activists who profess to want
to stop illegal immigration; while the CCA’s
financial survival is directly linked to its
continuation.
“They (Tea Party supporters) don’t know because they don’t listen to
us,” Cervantes-Gautschi said. “The argument that
this eases overcrowding of prisons is utter
nonsense.”[48]
Beirich called the attempts of Tea Party
politicians like Montenegro to reconcile their
support of SB 1070 with smaller government
“absolute balderdash.” “They haven’t been forced
to reconcile it,” she said. “To their base, they
play up this red-meat, culture war issue. To the
press, they insist they’re just for limited
government. They’re supposed to be for liberty,
less government intrusion, but what they’re
endorsing is the ultimate intrusion.”[49]
Second Thoughts
During the past few months, various segments of the electorate have
expressed concern that perhaps things have gone
too far. The economic boycott, first started by
the National Council of La Raza, and widely
endorsed by other civil liberties organizations
after the passage of SB1070, has already
cost the state dearly. In the first six months
after the bill’s signing, the convention
industry lost $141
million.[50]
“On top of that, there is all the
negative publicity,” said Democratic State
Senator Steve Gallardo, who is pushing for a
repeal of the law. “It’s going to take years to
get out from under this black cloud.” Because
Arizona is developing a reputation for racial
discrimination, he said, “We’re being called the
Mississippi of the Southwest.”[51]
Some business leaders are pushing back. In March, nearly sixty CEOs
signed a letter to legislators opposing
Arizona’s most recent round of anti-immigration
legislation. The letter referred to the
“unintended consequences” of the state’s “going
it alone” on the immigration issue. “It’s all
based on their own self interests,” Pochoda
said. “They lost money. But we’ll take it.”
Nonetheless, FAIR and the private prison industry continue
their lobbying
efforts. After a lull in support, the
dual forces behind SB 1070 are now seeing some
success spreading similar legislation to other
states. In May,
Georgia’s governor signed into law a bill based
on the ALEC model legislation.[52]
In June, Alabama passed an even more stringent
anti-immigration law, which Kobach proudly takes
credit for writing.[53]
Missouri and Pennsylvania are debating similar
legislation.[54]
Meanwhile, the FAIR-linked group
State Legislators for Legal Immigration (SLLI),
led by Pennsylvania Republican State
Representative Daryl Metcalfe, has been
developing model legislation for state
challenges to the notion of birthright
citizenship, which would prevent children of
undocumented immigrants—so-called anchor
babies—from automatically receiving U.S.
citizenship. The goal is to trigger a U.S.
Supreme Court review of the 14th
Amendment. In March, though, Arizona rejected
its anti-birthright-citizenship bill.
Additionally, in May, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in a different
Arizona case that states do have the right in
some instances to set immigration law, raising
questions about judicial review of SB 1070.[55]
Opponents had argued
that such state and local anti-immigration
legislation interfered with the jurisdiction of
federal government to enforce immigration.[56]
Meanwhile,
Pearce still claims that the law’s
economic impact on the state has been
positive. His website says,
Arizona has become a
national leader in the restoration of the Rule
of Law, with over 100,000 illegal aliens having
left the state since 2007, saving over $350
million in K-12, a huge reduction in violent
crimes as high as 30% in some cities and the
first time in Arizona history a declining
population in our Prisons, reduction in social
services cost and jobs for Americans, etc.[57]
His assertions are dubious—the statistics do not take into account the
impact of the 2008 collapse of the U.S. economy
and the skyrocketing unemployment rate on
reducing overall immigration. The number of
undocumented residents nationally has declined
eight percent since 1997, according to a Pew
Hispanic Center study.[58]
The Sanctuary Movement
In the early 1980s, the Southside
Presbyterian Church in Tucson, Arizona,
initiated the sanctuary movement, when it
sheltered thousands of people fleeing
Central American death squads. The
Rev. John
Fife
hung banners outside the church:
“This is a Sanctuary for the Oppressed of
Central America,” and “Immigration: Do not
Profane the Sanctuary of God.”[59]
The sanctuary movement was based on the
religious concept that we are to show our
neighbors mercy: “Which
now of these three, thinkest thou, was
neighbor unto him that fell among the
thieves? And he said, He that showed mercy
on him. Then said Jesus unto him, Go, and do
thou likewise”
(Luke
10:36-37). SB1070 would target such
sanctuaries by prohibiting “any municipal,
county or state policy from hampering the
ability of any government agency to comply
with federal immigration law.”
Misericordia. Perhaps it’s a
forgotten concept.
BIO:
Lauri Lebo is a writer and reporter whose latest
book is The Devil in Dover: Dogma v. Darwin
in Small-Town America (2009). She is working
on a second book about the Great Depression
travels of Ernie Pyle.