Arizona Gov. To Obama: Do Your Job!
Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer says she's not happy with the president's border response.
WIBW.com
Posted: 5:34 PM Jul 5, 2010
CNN – The same day President Obama is delivering a high profile speech on immigration, a web video is making the rounds featuring a frustrated Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer imploring the president to “do your job” when it comes to securing the borders.
In the web video posted earlier this week, Brewer stands in front of recently erected signs 80 miles from Arizona's Mexican border that warn travelers “smuggling and illegal immigration may be encountered in this area.”
“Two weeks ago I met with President Obama, he promised that we would get word from his administration on what they were going to do to secure the border. Well, we finally got the message, these signs,” Brewer says. “I'm 80 miles away from the border and only 30 miles away from Arizona's capital. This is an outrage.”
“Washington says our border is as safe as it's ever beenDoes this look safe to you? Washington is broken, Mr. President,” a visibly angry Brewer continues. “Do your job. Secure our borders.”
The newly-erected signs are the product of the Bureau of Land Management, according to local TV station KPHO, amid urging from local residents who have witnessed a wave of drug-related crimes.
Brewer's comments come more than a week after a senior Obama administration official confirmed justice department lawyers are planning to file a legal challenge to the controversial Arizona immigration law championed by Brewer.
Federal government lawyers who have been working on the expected challenge for several weeks will most likely file their arguments in federal court in Phoenix in the days leading up to July 28, when the statute is scheduled to take effect, the official said.
Administration officials have indicated the question of Arizona usurping federal authority to control the border and enforce immigration law is the most likely federal point of attack against the state law signed by Gov. Jan Brewer earlier this year.
In his immigration speech Thursday, Obama again took aim at the controversial Arizona measure, calling it “ill conceived.”
“It is not just that the law Arizona passed is divisive, though it has fanned the flames of an already contentious debate, laws like Arizona's put huge pressures on local law enforcement to enforce rules that ultimately are unenforceable. It puts pressure on already hard-strapped state and local budgets,” Obama said.
The president also defended his efforts to secure the border both with Mexico and Canada.
“We doubled the personnel assigned to border enforcement security task forces,” he said. “We tripled the number of intelligence analysts along the border. For the first time we have begun screening 100 percent of southbound rail shipments. And as a result, we're seizing more illegal guns, cash, and drugs than in years past.”
“The bottom line is this, the southern border is more secure today than at anytime in the past 20 years,” Obama added.