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Skelton: No reason to place noncitizens on juries

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In California, some bills move so quickly through the Legislature, no one has a chance to completely understand their potential impact.

A measure that would allow noncitizens to serve on juries is one of those bills, George Skelton says in his Thursday column.

Supporters have painted the issue as a matter of discrimination -- why bar legal immigrants, they say, from participating in an important part of American civic life?

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But Skelton says there’s no good reason to extend the responsibility to noncitizens.

“You must be a citizen to be eligible to serve in the Legislature and write the laws. You have to be a citizen to be a governor who signs the laws. And you have to be a citizen to vote and elect the lawmakers,” he writes.

Skelton adds, “It seems incongruous to allow noncitizens to determine whether a defendant has broken a law.”

All of Skelton’s columns are here.

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