WASHINGTON — California cities are mobilizing to fight the Trump administration’s effort to strip federal funding from so-called sanctuary cities, which do not enforce federal immigration policy.
WASHINGTON — California cities are mobilizing to fight the Trump administration’s effort to strip federal funding from so-called sanctuary cities, which do not enforce federal immigration policy.
Even as the Justice Department on Friday advised eight local governments and the state of California that they were at risk of losing federal dollars if they don’t cooperate, several cities had already directed their lobbyists to oppose such efforts.
Oakland, San Francisco and Pasadena have identified the sanctuary city funding cutoff as a lobbying priority in Washington, federal records show.
“While Pasadena is not a sanctuary city, the city does not believe others should be penalized,” said William Boyer, a spokesman for the city. The city council has declared it will “oppose efforts to deny federal funding to so-called ‘sanctuary cities,’ or communities that may not have the resources to enforce federal immigration laws.”
The letters Friday were the most overt measure the administration has taken to date to pull funding, though Trump’s budget director, Mick Mulvaney, has also asked lawmakers to include language curtailing money for sanctuary cities in a must-pass budget bill.
White House press secretary Sean Spicer said Friday that “greater latitude to deny federal grants to sanctuary cities” was a priority for the administration in the budget bill, along with money for a border wall. Congressional Democrats oppose both provisions.
Spicer would not say whether Trump would refuse to sign a spending bill — and possibly trigger a government shutdown — if Congress does not include the measures in legislation that must pass by next Friday, when the legislation that is now funding the government expires.
“We’re working with members on both sides of the aisle in both chambers to find a way forward,” Spicer said. “I think we feel confident that that will happen, that we will avoid a shutdown.”
Trump, too, sounded optimistic in the Oval Office, saying to questions about negotiations aimed at avoiding a shutdown that “I think we’re in good shape.”
In California, Attorney General Xavier Becerra issued a strong rebuke to the demand letter from U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ department.
“California has a right to determine how it will provide for the safety and general welfare of its residents and to safeguard their constitutional rights,” Becerra said in a statement. “Fear-mongering and falsehoods will not intimidate our state into compromising our values. Federal threats to take away resources from law enforcement or our people in an attempt to bully states and localities into carrying out the new administration’s unsound deportation plan are reckless and jeopardize public safety.”
Statewide, roughly $20 million in federal law enforcement grant funding is at risk this year, according to Tracie Cone, a spokeswoman for the Board of State and Community Corrections.