Arizona Governor against immigrant bill: says crackdown likely to hurt economic growth
Originally published in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock) February 3, 2005
Copyright 2005 Little Rock Newspapers, Inc.
BY LAURA KELLAMS ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE
Approving
legislation with the stated aim of discouraging illegal immigration
could hurt Arkansas' chances of landing major economic development
projects such as a long-sought Toyota factory, Gov. Mike Huckabee said
Wednesday.
Speaking on his monthly radio
call-in show on the Arkansas Radio Network, the governor said he
doubted that Senate Bill 206 by Sen. Jim Holt would get anywhere in the
Legislature. But if it did, Huckabee said, it could deter a company
like Toyota Motor Corp. or Sanyo Corp. in Forrest City or Nestle USA in
Jonesboro from investing in Arkansas.
"If
we send the message that, essentially, `If you don't look like us, talk
like us and speak like us, we don't want you.' It has tremendous
economic repercussions," Huckabee told radio listeners.
Holt of Springdale, a Republican like Huckabee, said in an interview later that his bill would do no such thing.
SB206
would place stricter identification requirements - verification of
citizenship - on people who register to vote and apply for state or
local public services. The bill, modeled after Arizona's Proposition
200, states that Arkansas encourages illegal immigration by providing
public benefits to illegal aliens and that the state has provided a
"safe haven" in contradiction to federal immigration policy.
Huckabee
said it's just not true that illegal aliens are receiving welfare, food
stamps and other public services. Anyone aware that they are should
alert the attorney general's office or the prosecutor's office, because
that's fraud, he said.
"What this has done
is it's inflamed a whole lot of people's emotions, making them think
we've got to rush in and pass some laws to stop some terrible thing
going on that isn't even going on," he said.
The state does offer some services to illegal aliens, however.
Those
services include health services at the Arkansas Department of Health,
where clinic employees don't ask for any identification before offering
services, and prenatal care specifically for illegal aliens as part of
the state Medicaid program. Huckabee has proposed expanded state
services to illegal aliens by extending college scholarship eligibility
and in-state tuition fees to them.
Huckabee,
with a raspy voice he said was caused by "rapid weather changes and
incessant speaking," said people who've been calling radio stations and
writing letters to the editor in favor of SB206 should first get their
facts straight.
"Before you point a gun and pull the trigger, make sure it's loaded and pointed at a proper target," Huckabee said.
Holt,
who didn't hear the radio show, said he can't help it if other people
try to "demagogue" on talk radio or in newspapers for or against SB206.
He said he was not referring to Huckabee but to radio callers and
newspaper columnists.
"I'm not going to get into this game of name-calling. We're going to dialogue on a levelheaded plane," he said.
He said nobody really believes that illegal immigrants aren't receiving state services.
"Do people really believe that? That they're not getting benefits illegally?" Holt said. "Everybody knows better than that.
"As
a public servant, for us to say there's no problem with people coming
over here legally, and no one wants to touch the issue for crying
`racist'
- that's not going to help the problem." Asked for specific cases of
illegal aliens using state services, he said, "I can tell you a bunch."
But he said he won't do that until later.
He said he is saving those specifics for testimony in legislative committee.
Holt
said his bill would not change the state's eligibility requirements for
programs, just the identification required to receive benefits.
But
Julie Munsell, a spokesman for Department of Human Services, said
changing identification requirements could change eligibility, as well.
For
example, the state offers a prenatal care program specifically to
illegal aliens who are pregnant, the idea being that the baby who is
born of that pregnancy will be a U.S. citizen who's eligible for the
state's ARKids First Medicaid program.
It's
not a program that is required by federal law. The state decided to
implement an optional program because officials believed it could save
money in the long run.
On average,
prenatal care costs $1,300 from doctors' appointments to post-delivery
care, compared to an average of $1,800 for one day in a neonatal
intensive care unit, she said. Good prenatal care can prevent an
intensive care stay in some cases, she said.
Holt
said he doesn't believe his bill would change that state program, but
Munsell said being required to show proof of U.S. citizenship would
negate the program because the illegal aliens for whom it's intended
can't show genuine proof of citizenship, she said.
Huckabee
told radio listeners that the state offers that program because
Arkansas is "pro-life" and because the Arkansas Constitution states
that life begins at conception.
He also
said that illegal immigrants in some cases are actually financially
supporting U.S. citizens, rather than the other way around. Illegal
aliens pay sales tax, fuel tax, income tax for which they won't receive
refunds, and Social Security tax that they'll never collect on, he said.
"In
essence, you're not paying for them. They're paying to help your
parents. They're paying to subsidize your parents' Social Security and
tax refund, and they don't get those benefits, and that's what we're
trying to make sure people understand," Huckabee told one caller.
Holt
said that just underscores the reason why the state should try to curb
illegal immigration. It's not a good system for the immigrant, either,
he said.
"We're saying people are coming
over here who are illegal ... if we don't make them uphold the law, is
that not exploiting people?" Holt asked.
"When
we allow them to come over illegally, against our laws, we set them up
as a thirdrate resident of our nation. It's exploiting a minority is
what it's doing, and for what? The sake of big business?"
He said the system encourages lawbreakers, like allowing a child who steals a cookie to eat it, anyway.
"I am enabling my child to become a criminal if I don't teach him a respect for the law," he said.
On
the radio show, callers were split on whether they agreed with
Huckabee, who has called for expanding state services to illegal aliens
by offering in-state tuition prices and scholarship eligibility to
those who graduate from Arkansas high schools. School and university
officials have said they don't know how many illegal aliens graduate
from Arkansas high schools.
The school system doesn't ask children or their parents for information about their immigration status.
One
caller who said he was from North Little Rock asked Huckabee whether he
or did not "take an oath to uphold the law of this land."
Huckabee
said he did, "absolutely." He said if illegal aliens are trying to
vote, they should be arrested. But he said SB206 is inflaming the
public to believe there's a problem when there's not.
Mitch
Chandler of Little Rock, spokesman for the Arkansas Department of
Economic Development, said Huckabee is right about the possible
implications of SB206 on economic development.
"It could send a message that if you don't look like us, we don't want you," Chandler said. "That's not the case."
Chandler said foreign-owned companies employ 30,000 Arkansans.