• The fight over Arizona
Supreme Court moves to center of presidential race
Court moves to center of 2012 race

The Supreme Court, suddenly at the heart of presidential …

Supreme Court hints OK on Ariz. immigration law
High court hints OK: AZ immigration law

Bucking the Obama administration, Supreme Court justices seemed…

Arizona Gov. Brewer gets book critique from Obama
AZ Gov. gets book critique from Obama

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer says she meant no disrespect when she …

Feds issue scathing report against AZ sheriff
Feds: Sheriff Arpaio violated rights

A scathing U.S. Justice Department report released Tuesday …

High court to look at state immigration laws
High court to look at state immigration

The Supreme Court stepped into the fight Monday over a tough …

Advertisement

Texas reps to propose Arizona law

East Texas lawmakers to introduce bills in 2011

Updated: Thursday, 29 Apr 2010, 3:11 PM CDT
Published : Wednesday, 28 Apr 2010, 10:58 PM CDT

AUSTIN (KXAN) - State Representative Debbie Riddle said Wednesday she will propose immigration reform legislation like the controversial law passed in Arizona, joining another lawmaker who promised the same last week.

The new Arizona law says police can stop people just on the suspicion they might be in the state illegally and it is now a crime for Arizona immigrants to lack registration documents.

Riddle, a Tomball Republican, joined Rep. Leo Berman, R-Tyler, who last week he would also introduce similar legislation when the Legislature convenes in January 2011.

"The opponents of this want to make it a big racial profiling thing, want to make it a big racist thing," said Rep. Riddle.  "It has nothing to do with that.  Has everything to do with safety and security."

The Chairman of the Mexican American Legislative Caucus in the Texas House said he doubts the bill would pass in Texas.

"I think I can get more support for legislation to have Leo Berman and Debbie Riddle deported to Arizona," said Rep. Trey Martinez Fischer, D-San Antonio. "We have enough work to do and our time is better spent working on issues that we can actually solve."

The Austin Immigrant Rights Coalition gathered in Plaza Saltillo in Austin Wednesday morning to express their opposition to the Arizona law and to announce their intent to fight any similar legislation introduced in Texas.

"The law that was passed in Arizona is not something that we welcome in the state of Texas," said Joe Cardenas, Texas LULAC Director.

The AIRC has planned a march for Saturday, May 1 to begin at the Capitol at 4 p.m. and end at Austin City Hall. The group said they support responsible immigration reform.
 

 


 

Advertisement

Site Tools

Advertisement