In 2010, Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer threw a molotov into the immigration debate when she signed SB 1070, a first-of-its-kind bill that empowered local police to investigate anyone they suspected might be an immigrant who arrived here illegally and demand proof of their legal status. But on Sunday she had so many nice things to say about the Senate’s immigration bill, which would legalize millions of unauthorized immigrants and put them on a path to citizenship, that she had to clarify the next day she hadn’t actually endorsed it. What exactly happened in the intervening three years?
The answer is Arizona’s immigration politics shifted in a major way. In 2010, fears of illegal immigration, exacerbated by drug violence in Mexico, made supporting SB 1070 and related legislation a popular move. But the bill sparked a revolt among Latinos, progressives, and civil liberties groups on a national scale with dire economic implications for Arizona. Conventions pulled out of major cities, companies faced sales boycotts, and Arizona’s business leaders complained that they were being generally stigmatized by the state’s growing reputation as an unwelcoming place for outsiders, especially Latinos. religious leader issued similar complaints, with Mormon missionaries saying that the Arizona law was affecting their outreach in Latin America.
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When state Senate president Russell Pearce, SB 1070’s architect, tried to bring forward another round of hardline bills in 2011 that would, among other things, require hospitals to report patients living in United States illegally to the authorities, the business community stopped him in his tracks. Pearce ended up facing a recall and lost to a moderate Republican, and again to another Republican in a comeback attempt the next year. The state’s been considerably more mellow on immigration matters ever since.









