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Scalia and Limbaugh trash Supreme Court immigration ruling

Antonin Scalia and Rush Limbaugh could easily switch jobs
(David Horsey / Los Angeles Times)
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The first day of a big week for the third branch of government brought a ruling on Arizona’s immigration law that was less than satisfying for Justice Antonin Scalia and the Rush Limbaugh wing of the U.S. Supreme Court.

A five-vote majority that included Chief JusticeJohn G. Roberts Jr.struck down all but one provision of the controversial statute, asserting that the federal government has preeminent authority for setting immigration policy. They did leave intact the most controversial element of Arizona’s disputed law -- the mandate placed on local police to determine the immigration status of anyone detained for other violations if there is reason to suspect that person is in the country illegally -- but they ruled that taking further steps to kick undocumented persons out of the country or to keep them from seeking work or require that they carry documentation of citizenship are not powers allocated to the states.

Scalia scoffed at this. In light of the Obama administration’s recent decision not to enforce immigration laws against young people brought into the country by their parents, Scalia said it is “mind-boggling” to think states are prohibited from doing the job that the federal government is failing to do.

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Right-wing radio’s Limbaugh was quick to speak up in support of Scalia, employing the same distinctive characterization of the majority decision. “It boggles the mind,” Limbaugh echoed. “All Arizona did was write a law that mirrors the federal law that Obama was not enforcing.”

On this, as on all other issues, Limbaugh has his loyalists who agree with everything he says. He calls them “dittoheads.” Scalia also has his dittoheads. They are the two justices who joined him in dissent on the Arizona ruling, Clarence Thomas and Samuel A. Alito Jr. The three are the unwavering conservative block on the court, usually joined by Roberts and occasionally by the perpetual swing voter, Anthony Kennedy.

Those five did band together on a ruling Monday, overthrowing a 100-year-old Montana statute that limited corporate donations to political campaigns. The venerable law was adopted back in the days when copper kings and robber barons bought and sold politicians like hogs at auction. But the law was found to be in conflict with the court’s notorious Citizens United ruling from 2010 that has turned American politics into a shopping mall for big corporations and billionaires.

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It is interesting that though Scalia defended the right of states to conduct their own immigration policies to keep their people safe from border crossers, states’ rights did not count for much in his campaign finance deliberation. There, he reasoned that the political interests of billionaires supersede the duty of the state of Montana to protect its citizens from the corrupting influence of monied interests.

Scalia’s comments about President Obama’s shift in immigration enforcement clearly indicate he does not sequester himself in an ivory tower far from the roar of current politics. He knows what is going on. He certainly knows that Citizens United has already had a dramatic effect on the 2012 campaign by sharply tilting the flow of campaign dollars toward the kind of candidates Limbaugh favors.

Apparently that is a result that does not in the least disturb Antonin Scalia and his dittoheads on the high court.

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