Showing posts with label David Chiu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Chiu. Show all posts

Thursday, March 8, 2018

Trump, DOJ 'going to war' against California, says governor, over sanctuary laws

Assemblyman David Chiu addresses protestors in Sacramento.

NO ONE should be surprised at the latest salvo from Attorney General Jeff Sessions against the State of California. The tension between the state and the Donald Trump administration has been simmering for a long time.

California and the Trump administration have long been on a collision course since Trump announced his candidacy for president by describing Mexican immigrants as drug dealers and criminals, mocking Asian political and business leaders with a sterotypical accent and attacking Hollywood entertainment celebrities and liberal San Francisco.

"California, we have a problem," said Sessions in front an audience of law enforcement officials. The Department of Justice has filed a lawsuit, he told the California Peace Officers Association, to undo the California Values Act, three so-called sanctuary laws that the state's legislature passed last year in response to the Trump administration's immigration enforcement measures.


The lawsuit argues that California lacks the authority to impede cooperation with federal immigration enforcement efforts. It reads:
This lawsuit challenges three California statutes that reflect a deliberate effort by California to obstruct the United States’ enforcement of federal immigration law, to regulate private entities that seek to cooperate with federal authorities consistent with their obligations under federal law, and to impede consultation and communication between federal and state law enforcement officials.
Only a quarter of the audience gave him a standing ovation after his speech.

“This is basically going to war against the state of California,” said Gov. Jerry Brown. “This is pure red meat for the base … The Trump administration is full of liars.”

U,S. Senator Kamala Harris, whose parents are immigrants, called the DOJ's suit hypocritical.

“It’s hypocrisy at its height. Again, I think there’s a distraction in that they’re trying to suggest that this is about the constitution when in fact, what they’re doing is playing politics,” she said. “They’re playing politics and they’re playing politics with California.”

“Trump and Sessions think they can bully California -- but it won't work,” Harris said in a tweet.

Gubernatorial candidate State Treasurer John Chiang said, “California refuses to be a cog in Donald Trump’s deportation machine, and we will not tolerate these attacks on our communities,” he said. “This isn’t just a stand against the administration. This is a statement of values.”

Several state legislators addressed the demonstrators outside the Capitol protesting Sessions' presence and the administration's immigration policies.

"Attorney General Sessions' publicity stunt to sue California will not deter leaders in our state from standing up for our immigrant communities.  California will continue to protect our families and defend our values," said Assemblymember Davie Chiu, D-SF.
"As a former prosecutor, I know sanctuary policies make us safer.  When immigrants feel comfortable reporting crimes to police and testifying as witnesses in court, our communities are safer."
Assemblyman Rob Bonta, the first Filipino/American legislator in California tweeted:


Congressman Ted Lieu of southern California added:


Asian Americans Advancing Justice - California (Advancing Justice - CA) issues the following statement in response:

“Our large and diverse immigrant communities are essential to the fabric of our great state. California is home to 2.6 million undocumented immigrants, 417,000 of whom are Asian American. Studies have shown that jurisdictions with Sanctuary policies are safer and more economically prosperous than non-sanctuary jurisdictions. Immigrants help California thrive.


The Trump administration has been obsessive in their attack and scapegoating of immigrants," says the AAAJ statement, "fueled by hate, xenophobia, and racism. But the Constitution is clear: the federal government cannot commandeer California’s resources to carry out deportations.
“It is very clear that Donald Trump has California in the crosshairs,” said state Sen. Kevin de León (D), the state Senate president pro tem.

This is partly because Trump's animosity towards California goes way beyond immigration. The state represents to Trump supporters: environmental regulations and gun control, it's at the center of the LGBTQ movement and tech innovation, the state has the largest immigrant population in the country and to top it off, somehow California is the envy of the rest of the country with the country that is the seventh largest economy in the world.

Perhaps most galling to Trump, California has been the center of the political resistance to Trump since he was a candidate. Trump received just 31.6 percent of the vote in California in 2016, lower than any Republican presidential nominee in history. 
The state has sued and  the GOP's attempt to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program.

It should be very interesting when Trump visits California next week, his first visit since he was elected. He reportedly will avoid the San Francisco Bay Area, a hotbed of anti-Trump sentiment, and spend most of his time in Southern California.

At the Sacramento rally, Assemblymember Chiu asked, “Are we ready to resist, to defend our state?”  

“Mr. Trump, Mr. Sessions, we are America, we are California, and we will be here long after you are gone,” said Chiu, himself the child of immigrants and the author of one of the bills that Sessions is suing California over.
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Friday, January 20, 2017

AAPI Democrats Issue an open letter to Californians

Assemblymember Evan Low joined other Democratic legislators in an open letter to Californians.
Earlier versions of this post misidentified the above photo.
AFTER TODAY'S (Jan. 20) inauguration of President Donald Trump as the 45th President, President Barack Obama and his family took a flight on Air Force One to Palm Springs, California. Perhaps he wanted to get away from the hubbub in Washington and take comfort in the bluest of blue states, take in some golf and just depressurize after living under a microscope that last eight years.

Before Obama boarded Air Force One for that flight west, California's Democratic legislators issued an open letter today to the people of California marking the first day of the Trump administration. The seven AAPI legislators signed the letter.

The state, with its large immigration population and the diversity of its residents, voted overwhelmingly (2 to 1) for Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton over Trump; Gov. Jerry Brown has vowed to resist any attempts by the Trump administration to weaken the state's laws on protecting the environment and restrict guns; and numerous cities and school districts have declared themselves sanctuaries in preparation for the expected clampdown by ICE under direction of the new president.

"We will continue to honor our commitments to the people of California," the letter stated. "The California contract is a promise to ourselves and to one another that we will build a sustainable economy, environment and society that doesn’t just protect the wealthy or the powerful, but instead will benefit every Californian and benefit from every Californian."

AAPI state lawmakers joined in signing the letter led by Assemblymember Rob Bonta (Oakland-Hayward), chair of the California Asian * Pacific Islander Legislative Caucus. He was joined by David Chiu  (San Francisco); Phil Ting (San Francisco), Kansen Chu (San Jose), Evan Low (Silicon Valley), Ed Chau (Monterey Park) and Al Muratsuchi (D-Torrance). 

The letter acknowledges the new administration in Washington, D.C., but emphasizes that change will not alter California’s progressive path. Assemblymembers also participated in reading the letter on video.


The letter outlines a commitment to protecting California’s progress – and making new gains where necessary – on an array of issues including transportation, housing, education, jobs and the economy, environmental protection and environmental justice, equal protections under the law, public safety, immigrant protections, health, retirement security and freedom of information.
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“We join together on these issues today, knowing that we have much to achieve, but knowing that our chances of success are bolstered by the scope of what we are working for,” the letter says. “Each piece is essential to a complete California dream.”
At stake is $105 billion in funds that comes from the federal agencies for safety net services and infrastructure improvements. It is feared that the Republican-controlled Congress will divert that money as a form of punishment.

Trump has promised to repeal Obamacare even though no plan has been proposed to take its place. The state has perhaps the most successful program in implementing the Affordable Care Act in its Covered California health care plan that has made more progress in lowering the percentage of its uninsured population from 17 percent to 9 percent between the launch of Covered California in 2013 to 2015.

After their respite in Palm Springs, the Obama family will return to Washington D.C. where they will live until their daughter, Sasha, 16, finishes high school in two years.
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