加州州长加文·纽森宣布,州政府将拨款3500万美元,以支持非法移民。与此同时,特朗普政府正在推进其大规模驱逐移民的议程。
据新闻稿称,纽森办公室将拨付立法机构在州预算中预留的这笔资金,用于帮助慈善合作伙伴为移民家庭提供食品援助和其他资源。
这些资金是在加州已拨款提供法律资源给面临驱逐的人群之外,额外增加的资金。
纽森在新闻稿中表示:”当联邦政府针对勤劳的家庭时,加州站在他们一边——联合合作伙伴并资助当地社区,以帮助支持他们的邻居。随着特朗普政府加速大规模拘留、践踏正当程序,并以超过1700亿美元资助威权式执法,这种迫切需求日益增长。当特朗普政府选择残忍和混乱时,加州选择社区。”
纽森的一位发言人表示,他一直在与移民家庭和社区领袖讨论联邦政府的移民打击行动。
“人们害怕离家,害怕上学或工作,甚至买不起杂货,”发言人告诉《加州新闻网》(CalMatters)。
据《加州新闻网》报道,尽管面临严重预算限制,加州仍拨付了这笔资金,纽森办公室预计下一个财政年度将出现29亿美元的赤字。该州今年还限制了非法移民的医疗保健,以弥补去年更大的赤字。
加州卫生与公众服务局局长金·约翰逊在新闻稿中表示:”当联邦行动造成恐惧和不稳定时,我们的责任是为家庭挺身而出。这项投资将加强当地合作伙伴,他们正在帮助人们在极其困难的时刻获得法律服务和满足基本需求。”
加州拉丁裔立法核心小组主席、民主党州参议员莉娜·冈萨雷斯表示,这笔资金显示她的政党将”继续与我们的移民家庭站在一起”。
冈萨雷斯说:”联邦政府正在对我们的社区发动战争——我们不会容忍这种行为。我们正在投入资金,以停止恐惧、停止家庭分离和停止侵犯我们的基本权利。”
共和党议员卡尔·德马奥批评这笔资金是”荒谬的”。
“如果你被美国国税局审计并发现欠税,作为公民,你不能说,’我想要一个免费的律师来对抗联邦政府,’”德马奥告诉《加州新闻网》。
总统唐纳德·特朗普在竞选时承诺要对移民进行大规模打击,并随后通过大规模驱逐移民兑现了这一承诺。
今年6月,特朗普签署了一项预算法案,其中包括1700亿美元用于移民执法、拘留和驱逐,该投资旨在在四年内每年驱逐多达100万移民。
《加州新闻网》报道称,加州为移民法律服务预留的州资金,使得这些资金无法用于帮助有严重或暴力重罪定罪的人对抗驱逐。
加州法律并未禁止州惩教人员将犯有严重或暴力重罪的非法移民移交给移民与海关执法局(ICE)拘留。
加州议会发言人、民主党人罗伯特·里瓦斯在新闻稿中表示:”面对特朗普残忍和非法的移民突袭,加州绝不会保持沉默。我们将以勇气和行动回应恐惧和恐吓。”
California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the allocation of $35 million in state funding to support illegal immigrants as the Trump administration carries out its massive deportation agenda.
Newsom’s office is releasing the money that the legislature set aside in the state budget to help philanthropic partners support immigrant families with food assistance and other resources, according to a press release.
These funds are on top of funds the state already allocated to provide legal resources to those facing deportation.
“While the federal government targets hardworking families, California stands with them – uniting partners and funding local communities to help support their neighbors,” Newsom said in the release. “The urgent need grows as the Trump Administration accelerates mass detention, tramples due process, and funds authoritarian enforcement with over $170 billion. As the Trump Administration chooses cruelty and chaos, California chooses community.”
A spokesperson for Newsom said he has been speaking with immigrant families and community leaders about the federal government’s immigration crackdown.
“People are afraid to leave their homes, afraid to go to school or work, and unable to afford groceries,” the spokesperson told CalMatters.
California allocated the money despite significant budget constraints, as Newsom’s office anticipates a $2.9 billion deficit in the coming budget year, according to CalMatters. The state also limited health care for illegal immigrants this year to help make up for a larger deficit last year.
“When federal actions create fear and instability, our responsibility is to show up for families. This investment strengthens local partners who are helping people access legal services and meet basic needs during an incredibly difficult moment,” Kim Johnson, secretary of the California Health and Human Services Agency, said in the release.
Democrat state Sen. Lena Gonzalez, chair of the California Latino Legislative Caucus, said the funding shows her party will “continue to stand in solidarity with our immigrant families.”
“The federal government is waging a war on our communities – and we won’t stand for it,” Gonzalez said. “We are putting money behind an effort to stop the fear, stop the separation of our families and stop violating our basic rights.”
Assemblymember Carl DeMaio, a Republican, blasted the funding as “absurd.”
“If you were audited by the IRS and found to owe money and back taxes, as a citizen, you couldn’t say, ‘Well, I want a free lawyer to fight the federal government,’” DeMaio told CalMatters.
President Donald Trump campaigned on a major immigration crackdown and has since followed through with that promise through mass deportations.
In June, Trump signed a budget bill that included $170 billion for immigration enforcement, detention and deportation, an investment that aims to remove up to 1 million immigrants from the U.S. per year over four years.
California state funds set aside for immigration legal services prevent money from being used to help people with serious or violent felony convictions fight against deportations, CalMatters reported.
California laws do not block state corrections staff from moving illegal immigrants who have been convicted of serious or violent felonies to Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody.
“California will never be silent in the face of Trump’s cruel and unlawful immigration raids. We will meet fear and intimidation with courage and action,” Speaker of the Assembly Robert Rivas, a Democrat, said in the release.
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