Bacon's Rebellion

Corey Stewart’s Xenophobic Games


Corey A. Stewart is playing “Whack -A-Mole.”

Now that Susan Bolton, a federal judge in Arizona, has struck down the more noxious parts of that state’s racist and xenophobic anti-immigrant law, the chairman of the Prince William County Board of Supervisors has freshened up his version of the Copper State law for all of the Old Dominion.

Stewart, a Republican, shepherded a similar law in his largely white, affluent bedroom county outside of Washington and had plans to infect all of Virginia with it as he takes credit for helping brainstorm Arizona’s ill-advised venture.

Judge Bolton blocked parts of the Arizona law that would make it a crime for immigrants not to carry their registration papers with them 24/7, make it illegal to seek employment in public areas, authorize police to make warrantless arrests of people they assume to be illegal aliens, and require police to check a person’s immigration status wherever possible.

In response, Stewart has done a quick sidestep shuffle and is proposing revisions for Virginia. They include not requiring immigrants to carry with them IDs showing they are legit (it was struck down in Arizona anyway), but he would make it illegal for undocumented aliens to buy property or register a car. If someone wants to make a wire transfer out of the country, they must pay fees ranging $5 for $500 or 1 percent of the sum above that. It isn’t clear if this would apply to all Virginians or just immigrants but Stewart says it would stem immigrants from sending home the money they earn in the state. You get it back as a tax credit when you file your taxes (I thought Republicans were against regulation and bureaucracy).

Just after Bolton issued her ruling hours before Arizona’s law took effect on July 28, Stewart said:

“I think the Obama administration has made a strategic blunder.” By filing suit against Arizona’s law, the administration “is just trying to intimidate Arizona.”

“Intimidate”? Now that’s a curious choice of words.

If you want to see examples of intimidation, check out the Web site for Virginia Rules of Law campaign, which Stewart launched in June. On it, a smiling Stewart (family photo on right rail) brags that thanks to his law, “illegal aliens fled the county, and the violent crime rate has plummeted.” (The former may be true, but the latter is seriously in doubt as statistics have shown little connection between the law and violent crime.

Granted, as a state bordering Mexico, Arizona has a lot more immigrant traffic than does Prince WIlliam. The Copper State, which didn’t join the union until 1912, has for centuries been a spillover region linking Latin America, Native America and European America. It really didn’t become Anglo-ized until white retirees started showing up in the 1960s, and only after that did immigration suddenly become a big problem.

As a rather sleepy and affluent suburb, Prince William has not been awash with immigrants in the same way. It is not the hotbed of serious crime that one sees in the District or in Virginia metropolitan areas such as Richmond or Portsmouth. The vast majority of immigrants, documented or otherwise, seem to be hard-working, law-abiding Latinos filling low-end jobs that whites don’t want.

As obnoxious as Stewart’s views are, he still has support in Virginia. Attorney General Kenneth Cuccinelli filed papers in Arizona supporting that state’s law.

It amazes that Stewart keeps coming up with such xenophobia when Virginia and the U.S. are more closely tied to the global economy than ever before. As a graduate of Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service, he ought to know this.

Not only are his proposals hateful, some are just plain stupid. Take the fee on wire transactions overseas. Let’s see how this might affect my family personally. My wife was born in Russia and has been a naturalized U.S. citizen since 1993. She has since earned a B.S. and an M.A. degree in this country and has been teaching in school and paying taxes since 2000. I can vouch for this. I stood next to her when she was naturalized (and we had a hell of a party afterwards) and I know she pays taxes because I have filed them.

Her nephew still lives in Russia and is a middle schooler who is nuts about ice hockey. He needs equipment and money for training camp. Sometimes she sends it via wire transfer. So now we are going to have to pay some ridiculous extra fee designed to punish Virginians who happen to have been born in a different country. How American.

How Stewart’s wicked brew of discriminatory laws plays out in autumn congressional elections and the ones for Virginia General Assembly in 2011 depend on how higher courts handle Judge Bolton’s decision. It could very well be that the courts will strike down all of the Arizona law, not just parts of it. If so, Prince William’s immigration law would be in jeopardy. Efforts to pass one in Virginia will be moot. And Stewart will look like a fool.


Peter Galuszka


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