Bill introduced to defund “sanctuary cities”

US mayors and governors don’t have the power to defy the federal government. Or do they? Are there legal teeth in Donald Trump’s words to “defund sanctuary cities”?

Representative Lou Barletta (PA, 11th) introduced a bill on Thursday that would grow a nice set of chompers and provide consequences for defiance of federal law. From Barletta.house.gov:

BARLETTA’S 1ST BILL OF 115TH CONGRESS: DEFUND SANCTUARY CITIES

Stops Federal Funding for Cities Failing to Cooperate with Immigration Officials

WASHINGTON – Congressman Lou Barletta (PA-11) today introduced the Mobilizing Against Sanctuary Cities Act, H.R. 83, which will stop all federal funds from flowing to states or localities which resist or ban enforcement of federal immigration laws, or flatly refuse to cooperate with immigration officials.  The bill is the first piece of legislation introduced by Barletta in the 115th Congress and represents the third time the congressman has introduced the measure.  In 2011, the bill was the first piece of legislation he ever introduced as a member of Congress.  He introduced it a second time in the 114th Congress in 2015.

“One of the principal duties of the government is to protect its citizens, and the idea of sanctuary cities runs completely counter to that responsibility,” Barletta said.  “Too many mayors and local governments think that they are above federal law and place their own ideology ahead of the safety of their residents.  This bill will stop that practice by saying to these sanctuary cities, ‘If you refuse to cooperate with federal immigration enforcement, you will lose your federal funding.’”

The Mobilizing Against Sanctuary Cities Act prohibits any federal funding for a minimum period of one year to any state or local government which has a policy or law that prevents them from assisting immigration authorities in enforcing federal immigration law.  The Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE) lists about 300 such localities in the United States.  Barletta’s bill directs the attorney general to compile an annual list of such cities and issue a report on any particular state or locality upon request from a member of Congress.  A state or local government would only regain federal funding eligibility after the attorney general certifies that its laws and policies are in compliance with federal immigration statutes.

The issue is this: 300 cities already refuse to cooperate with federal authorities over detainer requests from ICE officials, making illegals shielded from deportation — even those accused or convicted of felonies — as there is nothing in existing law obligating a city, county or state to cooperate, with no legal consequences when those entities fail to work with ICE.

Does anyone recall when then-Arizona Governor Jan Brewer passed a bill mandating state illegal immigrant enforcement that was tougher than the federal standard? Obama stated the US “cannot have fifty different immigration policies,” which the US Supreme Court affirmed. However, what’s good for the goose is good for the gander, and that ruling may lend precedent, credence and authority to Barletta’s bill.

The Mobilizing Against Sanctuary Cities Act would cease federal funding to sanctuary regions or entities for one year. As Barletta said, “they would not get one federal cent.” We’re talking potentially billions of federal dollars of highway, education and medicaid cash.

The map above, provided by the Center for Immigration Studies, shows the location of US sanctuary cities, counties and one Leftist state, Fornicalia.

Then there is this point from CIS.org:

Tackling Sanctuaries

By Dan Cadman, Jessica Vaughan December 2016

Key Findings

This report examines the justifications given by sanctuary jurisdictions for their policies, and finds them to be largely unfounded:

  • Cooperation with immigration enforcement has not been shown to undermine community trust nor cause immigrants to refrain from reporting crimes; there are better ways to address issues of access to police assistance without obstructing enforcement;

  • Simply cooperating with federal immigration agencies does not turn local officers into de facto immigration officers, because federal officers make the decisions on which aliens are targeted for deportation;

  • Such cooperation is not very costly for local jurisdictions because the removal of criminal aliens spares future victims and saves future supervision, incarceration, and social services costs to criminal aliens. In addition, cooperative localities can receive partial reimbursement for their incarceration costs.

  • Claims by some local law enforcement agencies that they need a warrant in order to hold aliens for ICE are dubious but can be accommodated by the issuance of ICE administrative warrants.

The Trump administration has a number of tools available at its disposal and within the confines of executive authority to address the problem of sanctuaries and the public safety problems they create.

Here’s how to do so:

  • Rescind the Obama administration actions and policies that encourage and enable sanctuaries, including clarifying that local agencies are expected to comply with detainers;

  • Cut federal funding to sanctuaries;

  • Initiate civil litigation to enjoin state or local laws and policies that egregiously obstruct enforcement of federal immigration laws and regulations;

  • Selectively initiate prosecution under the alien harboring-and-shielding statute, which is a federal felony; and

  • When requested, issue administrative warrants to accompany detainers as a reasonable accommodation to state or local concerns. Negotiating over which aliens will be subject to detainers, as is current policy, is not a reasonable accommodation.

  • Direct ICE to begin publishing a weekly report providing the public with information on all criminal aliens released by the sanctuaries.

Please read the excellent but somewhat lengthy article here.

Representative Barletta’s H.R. 83 is an important bill submitted at the proper time. Barletta is correct; we’re either a nation of laws or we are not. We either obey the rule of law or we do not. If we do not — by allowing sanctuary cities, counties and states to stand, in direct contradiction of federal law — then we undermine ourselves.

If we have no rule of law, then most any city, county or state may arbitrarily decide which laws they wish to obey or disregard. Therefore, if that stands, it logically follows that the individual likewise has the freedom to obey or disregard the laws that he or she chooses, when he or she chooses.

It is the path to chaos.

The time is now to stop the chaos, and establish and reaffirm discipline and sovereignty.

BZ

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13 thoughts on “Bill introduced to defund “sanctuary cities”

  1. Congress needs to pass this bill now so Pres Trump can drop the hammer on day one. Time to put some manners on the left.

    • Manners hell; I just want people to obey the same laws to which I am obligated. Leftists should simply be honest and own their wishes. They want to decriminalize illegal immigration? Pass a bill and change the law — remove the law honestly and lawfully.

      BZ

  2. One stat that Dems don’t want to tell you about sanctuary cites. In CA they issue drivers licenses to illegals, most live in sanctuary cities . The hit and run rate average in CA is 11% while in a sanctuary city like LA the hit and run rate it 48%, in one year over 20,000 hit and runs causing hundred’s of deaths and thousand’s of injuries.

  3. If my info is correct, my governor has also started a movement to withhold state funding from sanctuary cities/counties as well. Maybe the two funding losses will finally wake up the libs, but then again I’m not sure if anything can really do that.
    BTW, I hope that most folks have noted the correlation between the sanctuary cities and the blue votes. Do I even need to point out which political party controls those cities? And they have the nerve to call us deplorable……….

    • The correlation is direct and lengthy. They are also the areas experiencing a direct upturn in crime.

      I can tell you unequivocally why crime in certain cities and areas is rising. There are currently over 20 agencies being monitored by the feds/operating under a consent decree. Law enforcement agencies nationwide are being told that they “over-police.” Consequently officers are pulling back from what is known as “self-initiated activity.” They are being told they cannot stop and frisk. Officers are handling the calls to which they are dispatched with professionalism and integrity, but in terms of digging into the neighborhood or the community, they have withdrawn because they have been told explicitly to do so by their administrators, and/or via pressure from community leaders, societal pressure, and political interests. Crime rates and statistics are also trending up because of little follow-up by prosecutors on impolitical cases, and by recent propositions and laws that have decriminalized some acts, reduced them from felonies to misdemeanors, or eliminated them wholesale. Check out AB 109, Prop 47 and Prop 57 in California, for example. Property crimes and crimes involving drugs have skyrocketed because criminals are not stupid.

      Law enforcement officers realize they are already targeted for ambush, injury and death; things are to the point where they must recognize and handle not only officer survival, but career survival. I have always said that America gets the kind of policing it deserves. The Ferguson Effect truly does exist and was acknowledged by the FBI.

      Cops are human. They respond to pressure and directives. They also want to go home safe to their families and loved ones at the end of watch. Accused of over-policing? Yes, many are saying, we are responding to your demands.

      You do not need to be a rocket surgeon or a brain scientist to see the truth.

      BZ

  4. This is all amazing to me. Why, when and how did illegals become such a protected species?
    Wasn’t the Civil War fought to preserve the Union? ( at least from the Northern perspective). And didn’t that at some basic level mean as part of the Union its laws are to be followed? If a city or county wants to declare itself a ‘sanctuary place’, isn’t this a form of seceding? Aren’t they setting themselves up to defy Federal laws? Are these places part of the USA or not? If the South couldn’t get away with it, why can they?

    • Abigail, it is rather astounding as to how the goal posts have been reset time and again, up to the point where it is now the responsibility of the American Taxpayer to not just tolerate, but accept illegal immigrants but, now, to advocate for them.

      Because in these times, if you are not an active advocate for illegals, you are a ___ist. Fill in the blank.

      It has been the same progression for the LGBTQ crowd, in terms of progression.

      It all ignores one mighty point: it is the responsibility of the US to not only take in and pay for illegals — it is the responsibility of the US to provide American jobs IN Mexico — as witnessed by the response of Mexican officials and Leftists when Ford declined to go forward with a new plant in Mexico.

      BZ

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