It was only a couple of months ago that Mitt Romney told a Republican
debate audience in Arizona that the state was a “model” for the nation
on immigration. If elected president, he said, he would immediately drop
the lawsuits that the Obama administration has filed “against Arizona
and other states that are trying to do the job Barack Obama isn’t
doing.”
That was then. This is now.
Romney, who has all but wrapped up the Republican nomination, told
supporters recently that the party’s hopes in November were doomed
unless it increased its appeal to Latinos.
Right away, campaign aides told the New York Times that Romney hadn’t
been referring to Arizona’s groundbreaking immigration law — the one
allowing police to demand identification from anyone they detain and
suspect of being illegal immigrants — as a model for the nation. They
said he actually meant the state’s requirement that employers check the
legal status of job applicants on the federal government’s E-Verify
computer database, something he’d also discussed in the debate.
In January, Romney had welcomed the endorsement of Kris Kobach,
draftsman of the Arizona immigration law, and described Kobach as a
member of his “team” that would “take forceful steps to curtail illegal
immigration” and support the efforts of states like Arizona. Last week,
the Romney campaign described Kobach as merely a “supporter.”
An Etch A Sketch moment, where the candidate recasts his views in
hopes of appealing to a wider electorate? This bit of spin looks like it
goes a step further, into the terrain of trying to rewrite the
candidate’s own history.
First of all, the E-Verify requirement isn’t part of Arizona’s “show
us your papers” immigration law, SB1070, which was the subject of a
hearing Wednesday in the Supreme Court. E-Verify was part of a different
law that the high court upheld in a separate case last year. And the
suit challenging that law wasn’t filed by the Obama administration, but
by business groups led by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which
particularly objected to provisions revoking the licenses of companies
that repeatedly hired illegal immigrants.
So when Romney in February denounced Obama’s suit against the Arizona
law and promised to drop the case if elected president, he could only
have been referring to the law that the administration is actually
challenging before the Supreme Court, SB1070. That’s also the law that’s
been a model for Alabama, Georgia and other states, and the one that
Romney’s Arizona audience heard him proclaim as a model for the nation.
Even if his campaign now denies it.
Bob Egelko is the San Francisco Chronicle’s legal affairs writer.
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