Texas’ Immigration Crackdown Recalls Arizona’s Divisive ‘Show Me Your Papers’ Law

You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load. The Supreme Court eventually struck down portions of Arizona’s law, which had set off a torrent of fear and anger. Asylum seekers waited along a border fence to be processed […]

Texas’ Immigration Crackdown Recalls Arizona’s Divisive ‘Show Me Your Papers’ Law

Texas’ Immigration Crackdown Recalls Arizona’s Divisive ‘Show Me Your Papers’ Law thumbnail

You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.

The Supreme Court eventually struck down portions of Arizona’s law, which had set off a torrent of fear and anger.

Women sit on the ground along a tall border fence.
Asylum seekers waited along a border fence to be processed in Sasabe, Arizona, in February.Credit…Rebecca Noble for The New York Times

Jack Healy

The Supreme Court’s decision on Tuesday allowing Texas to arrest and deport migrants resonated deeply in Arizona, which passed its own divisive crackdown against illegal immigration more than a decade ago.

Arizona’s effort, which became known as the “show me your papers” law, set off a torrent of fear and anger after it passed in 2010 and jolted the state’s politics in ways that are still reverberating — offering a lesson of what could lie ahead for Texas.

The law required immigrants to carry immigration documents, and empowered police and sheriffs’ agencies to investigate and detain anyone suspected of being in the country illegally. It made undocumented immigrants fearful to drive or leave their homes. It sparked boycotts and angry protests. A political backlash removed the law’s Republican architect from office. Legal challenges gutted major provisions of the law.

The measure also galvanized a new generation of Latino activists to organize, register voters and run for office, seeding a political movement that has helped to elect Democrats across Arizona and transform a once-reliable Republican state into a purple political battleground.

“It made me realize where I stand in the United States, where my parents stand,” said Valeria Garcia, 21, an undocumented activist who was brought to Arizona from Mexico when she was 4 years old and is now majoring in political science and border studies at Arizona State University. “That was a political awakening.”

Immigration lawyers and immigrant children who grew up under the law, Senate Bill 1070, said it carved pervasive fear and uncertainty into Latino communities across Arizona. Some families hurriedly left the state. Some stopped going to work.


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