Texas Republicans could add Arizona-like residency checks to platform
05:48 PM CDT on Saturday, June 12, 2010
By GROMER JEFFERS JR. / The Dallas Morning News
gjeffers@dallasnews.com
Texas Republicans are proposing a platform that calls for a state law to require local police officers to verify that people arrested on suspicion of a crime are in the country illegally.
If Republicans have their way, the Legislature would make it a crime for an illegal immigrant to “intentionally or knowingly” be in the state of Texas.
The proposal, similar to the controversial law in Arizona, is part of the legislative priorities section of the platform. Two state lawmakers have already promised to introduce such bills for the upcoming legislative session, although previous efforts to toughen immigration policies have come up short in past sessions. Gov. Rick Perry has said he doesn’t think Texas should adopt a law similar to Arizona’s.
The platform is expected to be approved by delegates later today at the Texas Republican Party convention in Dallas. It contains the stated policy beliefs and goals of the party, though candidates and officeholders are not bound to it.
“It’s a good document,” said state Rep. Phil King, R-Weatherford. “The Platform Committee did a good job.”
King, who served as a lawyer for the committee, said most of the immigration proposals in the platform are the same as the 2008 version.
He expects stronger language prohibiting amnesty for those who enter the country illegally to be added before the official vote. But some delegates who are concerned about a backlash from Hispanic voters will offer proposals that support giving illegal immigrants a path to citizenship.
King said committee members don’t want the platform to be taken out of context.
“They are being careful with the wording because they don’t want it to be perceived as anti-Hispanic,” he said.
Eleven members of the committee that crafted the platform objected to the stance on a path to citizenship.
“We have never supported and oppose a policy of mass deportation. We support a realistic solution which permanently secures our borders and humanely resolves the legal status of illegal immigrants,” the minority group’s report stated. “We recognize that many illegal immigrants were brought to this country as minors.”
Some Republicans want the minority report removed from the overall document.
“I don’t like it,” said state Rep. Leo Berman of Tyler, one of the lawmakers planning to push for a law like Arizona’s. “We’ve got to get it out of there.”
Along with its tough stand against immigration, the platform calls for the repeal of the recently passed federal health care law, the downsizing of the federal government, the scrapping of cap and trade environmental proposals and the support of state’s rights.
The platform also suggests legislation that requires residents to produce a photo ID before voting. That issue caused turmoil in both the Senate and House last year and while the Senate approved it, the House never took it up.
Much of the Republican platform has not changed over the years, and its newest entries reflect the party’s deep dislike for President Barack Obama.
“We urge the Congress to defund, repeal, and reject the national healthcare takeover, also known as ‘ObamaCare,’ or any similar legislation,” the document states.
Texas Republicans support reallocating the majority of Medicaid spending to vouchers the poor could use to buy private insurance.
Democratic strategist Ed Martin said the Republican Party’s objection to the new healthcare law shows “they are marching far out of touch with what everyday Texans think and believe.”
In a new section, Republicans call for the outlawing of all sexually-oriented businesses, including strip clubs. Dallas is one of the adult entertainment centers of the country.
Some of the platform’s legislative priorities include:
*A law to require that a sonogram be performed and offered to a woman seeking an abortion.
*Strengthening the State Board of Education’s powers.
*Fighting against efforts to increase the tax on gasoline or to index it to inflation.