Senate primed to pass immigration crackdown including Gov. DeSantis priorities

By Renzo Downey
FloridaPolitics.com
March 4, 2022

‘Nobody wants to be here. Think I want to do the bill?’

The Senate is nearing a vote on legislation to further crack down on illegal immigration, a priority for Gov. Ron DeSantis.

Florida State Senator Aaron Bean

In discussions that carried the Senate well into the evening hours Wednesday, Democrats questioned the purpose of the bill (SB 1808), parts of which DeSantis has named as priorities for the 2022 Session. The measure, carried by Fernandina Beach Republican Sen. Aaron Bean, would prevent transportation companies from doing business with Florida if they participate in programs transporting to the state people who are in the country illegally.

DeSantis announced the proposal in December after criticizing President Joe Biden’s immigration policies, including bringing flights to Jacksonville to relocate people who were in the country illegally. DeSantis and Bean, whose district includes part of Duval County, have said Florida is aware of 78 early morning flights to Jacksonville organized by the federal government.

With his bill, Bean hopes to send a message to the Biden administration to follow federal law.

“Nobody wants to be here. Think I want to do the bill? I wish we didn’t have to do the bill. I wish the federal government would step up to the plate and protect our border,” Bean told senators Wednesday.

He also said other states will be watching what Florida has done and called the Sunshine State a leader.

“The federal government is going to do what the federal government has done until enough states say enough. Florida may be the first to say, enough,” Bean said.

The Senate is expected to pass the bill Thursday. Meanwhile, the House has moved its version of the bill (HB 1355), by Stuart Republican Rep. John Snyder, and could take up the immigration legislation in the coming days.

Bean, who is in his 10th year as a Senator, has called the flights a “midnight program of human smuggling” that’s part of Biden’s “unlawful pursuit of an open border policy.” Meanwhile, DeSantis has called the trips “clandestine flights” that his administration only learned about because of leaks from federal officials.

With changes approved last, the bill would not impact transportation companies’ ability to move unaccompanied minors, people protected under Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals or those in another protected status. The bill labels immigrants not accepted as part of the Immigration and Nationality Act as “unauthorized aliens.”

In four amendments to Bean’s bill on Wednesday, Democrats attempted to constrain the bill by clarifying which type of immigrants. One measure would have clarified that Ukrainian evacuees would be exempt from the provisions. However, Bean insisted that would already be the case.

In September, a federal judge struck down part of the 2019 sanctuary cities law, but Republicans hope the new bill will be another shot at the measure as the ruling goes to an appeal. The new legislation would take effect immediately with DeSantis’ signature.

The bill also would require that counties strike agreements with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to participate in a program for local law enforcement officers to help with immigration enforcement. Many counties have already reached such agreements.

DeSantis’ proposed budget includes $8 million to transport undocumented immigrants out of state. However, neither the House nor Senate budgets currently consider that provision.

While the Legislature is pushing forward with the provision, the bill doesn’t consider all five of DeSantis’ major proposals for the “Biden border crisis.” The bill doesn’t contemplate strengthening E-Verify enforcement or requiring private entities that bring immigrants to Florida illegally to compensate the state for “the harmful costs that fall on the public.” DeSantis also asked for jails and courts to collect the immigration status of individuals at the time of their arrest and conviction, but the bill doesn’t go that far with its immigration status reporting provisions.

In a letter to lawmakers and DeSantis on Wednesday, leader’s from Florida’s Venezuelan and American Business Immigration Coalition Action called the bill a direct attack on the Venezuelan community. They feared many immigrants with Temporary Protected Status could fall into the bill if their work permits are delayed due to backlogs at federal immigration offices.

The bill was done for political reasons, they continued.

“All these people want — our family, our neighbors — is to be able to work to provide for their families,” they wrote. “It is an outrage that this bill risks jeopardizing their ability to do so, injects instability and uncertainty into their long-term plans.”

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DENNIS JAY
DENNIS JAY(@dennisjay)
2 years ago

Never has a legislature spent so much effort on solving problems that don’t exist.

Sylvie McCann
Sylvie McCann(@sylviesylviemccann-com)
2 years ago
Reply to  DENNIS JAY

If you think immigration and the lack of border law enforcement for the last 2 years is not a problem, you have blinders on! This problem will fester enough to show its ugly head in a few years (yeah before Biden kicks the bucket) and will eventually morph into a bigger and out of control crisis that we will never be able to reverse. The time to act is now! Not wait and be late at the dance like this administration has been doing since in power!!

Joan Tobasco
Joan Tobasco (@guest_64133)
2 years ago
Reply to  Sylvie McCann

Joan Tobasco

You are 100% correct! Illegal immigration is and will harm this country! Action is needed yesterday to stop the criminals and drug dealers from coming here.

Richard Norman Kurpiers
Richard Norman Kurpiers (@guest_64135)
2 years ago
Reply to  DENNIS JAY

You are 100% correct Dennis. This is political grandstanding by politicians who use fear-mongering, misinformation, and dog whistles to stir up their base in an effort to stay in office. These “clandestine flights” which Bean describes as a “midnight program for human smuggling” are in reality, planes full of undocumented unaccompanied minors that are under the protection of federal law and the Department of Health and Human Services. Customs and Border Protection is bound by law and a landmark federal court settlement to continuously pursue the release of these minors to sponsors who are willing to care for them. Hence, the flights to places throughout the US to deliver these minors to temporary housing inside the US until their cases are settled. This bill is a toothless waste of time.

Bob Carter
Bob Carter (@guest_64131)
2 years ago

simply put: Biden has failed to protect our borders. This is just a way to increase the illegal population, and then create amnesty and full voting rights for those that have not followed the law and properly applied for citizenship. The results they hope for are millions more Democrat voters. Just think if those coming in were conservatives…..

Ben Martin
Ben Martin(@ben-martin)
2 years ago

Maybe the root cause of the immigration problem is how the IMF impoverishes 3rd world countries. I doubt you will ever here this from Senator Bean, as he is a “Banker” who is funded by Federal Reserve Member Banks. We should all read “Confessions of an Economic Hitman” by Perkins.

https://www.amazon.com/Confessions-Economic-Hit-John-Perkins/dp/1576753018