Pres. Obama criticizes Arizona’s new immigration law
NewsBites, Society & Culture, World — By Speak Equal on April 30, 2010 at 8:00 am“I don’t want us to do something just for the sake of politics that doesn’t solve the problem. I want us to get together, get the best ideas on both sides, work this through. And when it’s ready to go, let’s move. But I think we need to start a process at least to open up a smarter, better discussion than the one that is raging”
Reporting aboard Air Force One — President Obama on Wednesday dismissed Arizona’s tough new anti-immigration law as a “shortcut” that will merely inflame the debate “instead of solving the problem.”
In an impromptu session with reporters at the back of his plane, Obama described the law as a product of “people’s frustrations about the border.”
Although the president sympathized in part, saying we now have “hundreds of thousands of people coming in” who are “not playing by the rules,” he said Arizona had chosen the wrong approach.
The law, signed last week by Republican Gov. Jan Brewer, makes it a state crime to be in Arizona illegally and requires police to check suspects for immigration paperwork. It also bars people from soliciting work or hiring day laborers off the street, and empowers citizens to sue to force authorities to enforce the law.
“What I think is a mistake is when we start having local law enforcement officials empowered to stop people on the suspicion that they may be undocumented workers, because that carries a great amount of risk that core values that we all care about are breached,” the president said.
Asked whether his administration might try to mitigate the Arizona law in some way, Obama said: “We’re examining it now.”
On Tuesday, Atty. Gen. Eric H. Holder Jr. called the law “unfortunate” and said he was considering a court challenge.
Obama made the comments as he was returning from a two-day swing through three Midwestern states — Iowa, Illinois and Missouri — where he sought to defend his policies and promote Democratic candidates in November’s midterm elections.
Fixing the fractured immigration system will require a comprehensive solution that may not be possible this year, Obama said.
“l know we’ve gone through a very tough year and I’ve been working Congress pretty hard,” he told reporters. “So I know there may not be an appetite immediately to dive into another controversial issue. There’s still work that has to be done on energy.
“I don’t want us to do something just for the sake of politics that doesn’t solve the problem. I want us to get together, get the best ideas on both sides, work this through. And when it’s ready to go, let’s move. But I think we need to start a process at least to open up a smarter, better discussion than the one that is raging” now. [READ MORE]
Tags: Arizona, Immigration, President Barack Obama

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