Should California spend taxpayer money to fight Trump's deportation plan?

Responding to state officials promising to fight deportations, a reader asks: 'What about laws that make it a crime to enter the U.S. without permission?'

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To the editor: For all the media coverage and speculation about the incoming Republican administration’s promise to deport unauthorized immigrants, California’s anticipated resistance is questionable on many levels. (“ As mass deportations loom, ICE eyeing new detention facility in California ,” Dec. 7) Acting with high-profile defiance, state Atty.

Gen. Rob Bonta uses terminology like “California values” and “culture of fear and mistrust.” Gov.



Gavin Newsom has asked the state Legislature to set aside $25 million in taxpayer money for possible legal battles against the incoming Trump administration, which will probably include fights over immigration. That’s on top of the billions that unauthorized immigration already costs us. Are we supposed to trust our state leaders that any of this is worth the cost? Are they politicking for their future? There’s also the perennial question asked by law-abiding U.

S. citizens: What about laws that make it a crime to enter the U.S.

without permission? Who among us would not live in “fear and mistrust” if we were subject to arrest and punishment over breaking federal law? How do “California values” include harboring lawbreakers? Raymond Roth, Oceanside .. To the editor: If President-elect Donald Trump moves ahead with his plan to deport millions of immigrants, it is important to know if his claims about them are true or not.

Here’s a small part of what the Immigration Initiative at Harvard found in 2022: Given all the benefits immigrants bring to the U.S., the question needs to be asked: What are the benefits of deporting them? Richie Locasso, Hemet.