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Alito Record Shows Hard Line on Immigrant Rights
Commentary
By Mark Lloyd, New America Media
Little attention has been paid to Supreme Court nominee Samuel A.
Alito's views on immigration. As a lawyer for Reagan administration,
Alito argued that immigrants who enter the United States illegally are
not entitled to the rights afforded to American citizens.
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Jan 3, 2006 - Much has been made of Supreme Court
nominee Judge Samuel A. Alito's record on subjects such as abortion (he
is "personally opposed" to it) and his general support for greater
presidential power. Alito's view on immigration -- an increasingly
polarizing issue in America -- have barely drawn notice.
The case of Fenghu Chang is instructive. In the summer of 1992, Chang, a
chief engineer for a large engineering firm owned by the People's
Republic of China, led a delegation to the United States. A Chinese
security agent instructed Chang to watch the other members of his group
and to report any suspicious activity to the Chinese Embassy. Chang
began to suspect that several of his colleagues were planning to stay in
the United States but, fearing for their safety, did not report his
suspicions. Another member of the delegation told Chang he would report
on the suspicious activity, and on Chang as well. Noticing Chang's
distress, an American engineer advised him to meet with someone Chang
later learned was an FBI official.
The FBI official advised Chang that he was in danger and that he should
seek political asylum, and that the United States would assist Chang's
family. Chang applied for asylum.
In court, Chang testified that he feared prosecution in China because of
his prominent position there and his failure to report on other
delegates. Since Chang left China, his wife was forced to retire, his
passport was revoked and his photo was placed on record at the Ministry
of State Security. His sister, a high ranking official in his hometown,
warned him not to return because the local security agency was waiting
for him. Despite all of this, Chang's request for political asylum was
denied by the Immigration and Naturalization Service. The immigration
judge ruled that Chang did not face persecution "for any political
opinion" and that Chang had only shown a "subjective fear...of either
losing his job or being prosecuted for a failure in his responsibility."
Fortunately for Chang, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the
INS ruling in 1997, calling it a "somewhat Delphic oral opinion." There
was one dissenting opinion that would have sent Chang back to China and
most certainly to prison. It was issued by Alito.
In the previous decade, as a lawyer for the Reagan administration, Alito
argued that immigrants who enter the United States illegally are not
entitled to the rights afforded to Americans.
In a 1986 memo to William Webster, then director of the FBI, Alito
argued that it was constitutional for the agency to document and share
with other U.S. law enforcement agencies fingerprint and criminal
information of Iranian and Afghan citizens living in Canada. The FBI is
prohibited from sharing such information regarding U.S. citizens, but
Alito suggested that nonresident, non-citizens were not protected. In a
footnote in this same memo, Alito went beyond the question the FBI
presented and argued that the Constitution "grants only fundamental
rights to illegal aliens within the United States." Alito's position
ignored a landmark Supreme Court ruling that undocumented immigrant
children are guaranteed certain constitutional protections such as an
education, even if those rights are not deemed "fundamental."
Judge Alito has sought to distance himself from the memos he wrote while
working with the Reagan Justice Department. But as the case of Mr. Chang
demonstrates, his judicial record provides little comfort to those
concerned about immigrant rights. In his nine published opinions on
asylum cases, Judge Alito affirmed deportation judgments seven times,
according to a Yale Law School study. In eight published immigration
opinions not involving asylum applications, Judge Alito sided with the
INS seven times. Judge Alito's opinions suggest that immigration law
works best when the court bows to the wisdom of the INS.
"Judge Alito has embraced a conservative judicial philosophy on issues
critical to the rights and freedoms of our community," says Gen Fujioka,
Acting Executive Director of the Asian Law Caucus. "His decisions defer
to those with political and economic power and reveal hostility to laws
that support minorities, immigrants, women and workers."
Ann Marie Tallman, President and General Counsel of the Mexican American
Legal Defense and Education Fund (MALDEF), says that a MALDEF review of
Alito's legal record reveals a "disturbing pattern of insensitivity
toward Latino's lives." She adds that "Alito's misstatement of the law
regarding the constitutional rights of non-citizens may...reflect a
tendency on his part to disfavor constitutional protections for
undocumented workers, many of whom are Latino."
A December Washington Post poll indicates that 54 percent of Americans
think the Senate should confirm Alito, while 28 percent say he should
not be approved. Twenty percent of Americans said they did not know
enough about the nominee to have an opinion. But according to the
Leadership Conference on Civil Rights the opposition to Alito is
growing.
Too many Americans are under the false impression that presidents should
get to pick whoever they want to be on the Supreme Court. The far-right
wing of the president's party does not share that impression, and made
its disappointment clear when President Bush first nominated Harriet
Miers to the court. The far-right is very happy with the Bush's second
choice.
Those of us concerned about the rights of immigrants must push our
senators to take seriously their constitutional responsibility to
confirm a Supreme Court justice committed to the rights and freedoms of
everyone in the United States -- including immigrants.
Attorney Mark Lloyd, a senior fellow at the Center
for American Progress, teaches public policy at Georgetown University.
An award-winning broadcast journalist, Lloyd writes a monthly column for
New America Media called "Washington Pulse." |