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Ohio Republicans propose citizenship tracking with threat of future budget cuts

Ohio Republicans propose citizenship tracking with threat of future budget cuts

Yahoo17-03-2025

Activists protest the agenda of President Donald Trump during a rally near the water tower on the Magnificent Mile on Jan. 25, 2025, in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by)
Two Ohio Republicans have introduced a measure directing state agencies to track the number of people they interact with who aren't in the country legally.
The bill, sponsored by state Reps. Josh Williams, R-Sylvania Twp., and Tex Fischer, R-Boardman, requires an annual report from law enforcement, education and health officials among others.
Backers describe it as simply 'adding a box to a form,' but make it clear they want to leverage that information to restrict benefits.
'This information is going to come to the legislative body who has the power of the purse,' Williams told committee members. 'That's where the teeth are. '
Under the proposal, four state agencies — the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections, Job and Family Services, Education and Workforce, and Medicaid — as well as every Ohio law enforcement agency, are directed to 'collect and maintain' citizenship status for the people they serve. Each year the agencies must report their figures, broken down by the citizens who are lawfully present, and those who aren't here legally.
Agencies in charge of benefits like Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) food assistance or cash assistance have to report data based on household — whether all members are legal citizens, or if at least one member is not, with information about their specific immigration status.
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The agencies are also directed to report the monetary value of the benefits given to households with individuals who are not citizens.
However, the proposal doesn't indicate how agencies are supposed to verify an individual's status or how the reports will avoid counting individuals multiple times.
There's also no effort to quantify what immigrants contribute to the state. A recent American Immigration Council report, for instance, estimates in 2023 Ohio immigrants paid $7.3 billion in taxes — $2.5 billion of that to state and local governments.
Williams and Fischer introduced their bill last week. Fischer noted agencies throughout the state already collect several kinds of demographic data, 'but there is currently no provision in Ohio law to require these entities to collect data on citizenship status.'
'The citizens of Ohio have a right to know where their tax dollars are being spent,' Fischer said, 'and this bill allows us to take a step forward in painting the full picture of where our public funds are going.'
Under federal law, unauthorized immigrants are generally barred from access to benefit programs like SNAP, Medicaid and various forms of cash assistance. Even lawful permanent residents (green-card holders) have to wait five years before getting access to those benefits.
'I think ultimately our hope is that this data will come in over the next couple years, and we will see that we don't have a widespread problem with people who are unlawfully present in the country collecting these benefits,' Fischer said.
But his co-sponsor, Williams, thinks benefits definitely are going to unauthorized immigrants. The Toledo-area lawmaker criticized the city for becoming a 'Welcoming City.'
One element of that designation is that programs supporting entrepreneurs don't discriminate based on immigration status.
Williams said that means 'our local tax dollars are definitely going towards illegal immigrants.'
'This claim is patently false,' City of Toledo Communications Director Rachel Hart said in a text message.
She described the designation as an affirmation that the city is a place where immigrants 'can pursue the American Dream' and that it does not 'dictate funding decisions.'
'This kind of ludicrous rhetoric is a waste of time and a distraction from the real challenges Toledoans face,' she added. 'Once again, Rep. Williams is more interested in pandering to the extremes of his party than in serving the real needs of Northwest Ohio.'
And while the sponsors pitched the changes as minor record-keeping updates, Williams has long-term plans for the information.
'We're going to get into a budget cycle where we're going to have those department heads come and answer to us in (the) Finance (committee) and to our individual standing committees, and we're going to be able to say 5%, 3%, 10% of your budget went towards this — here's the data.' Williams said. '… It's the legislators that have the teeth when it comes to the budget, right? We're able to strip that funding out.'
Across the aisle, Democratic lawmakers wondered if the sponsors had adequately thought through their bill.
Rep. Tristan Rader, D-Lakewood, said he's sensitive to the limits on eligibility after working with the Cleveland Food Bank to sign people up for SNAP benefits. He noted the five-year waiting period for permanent residents, and that officials need to collect applicants' social security numbers.
'So, I'm wondering if you had conversations with (Job and Family Services) if this is not information in some way, shape or form, they already have, and if this isn't sort of, at least in this respect, a little bit redundant,' Rader said.
The sponsors said they had not spoken with the agency.
State Rep. Latyna Humphrey, D-Columbus, asked if they'd reached out to school officials or superintendents? Again, no.
ACLU of Ohio Chief Lobbyist Gary Daniels said 'there appears to be a lack of knowledge' about what data are collected and what services immigrants are eligible to receive.
Referencing limits on SNAP, he noted the bill requires state officials collect citizenship information about an entire household while remaining 'silent about how this is to be accomplished to the satisfaction of the bill's sponsors.'
Daniels added that collection of data from schools is particularly revealing. The sponsors have argued these data could be the premise for budget cuts, but federal law and U.S. Supreme Court precedent requires public schools enroll undocumented kids.
'So, if/when the data reveals how many undocumented students are attending Ohio's public schools, what do the sponsors anticipate the legislature's response will be,' he asked, 'keeping in mind schools have no choice in this matter regarding enrollment?'
Practically speaking, he added, carving out private entities like charter schools or hospitals from the data collection requirements would likely leave whatever report their legislation does produce, 'skewed and perhaps entirely unreliable, no matter what side of this issue one takes.'
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The GOP's latest megabill casualties
The GOP's latest megabill casualties

Politico

time20 minutes ago

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The GOP's latest megabill casualties

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Kweisi Mfume is pitching an old-school approach to one of House Democrats' highest-profile jobs
Kweisi Mfume is pitching an old-school approach to one of House Democrats' highest-profile jobs

Politico

time25 minutes ago

  • Politico

Kweisi Mfume is pitching an old-school approach to one of House Democrats' highest-profile jobs

Frustrated by Democrats' seniority system, Kweisi Mfume fled the House three decades ago, saying he could do more to advance civil rights from the outside. Now he's back and trying to reap the benefits of seniority at a moment when many in his party are starting to openly question it. The Baltimore native last month surprised many House colleagues by entering the wide-open race to lead Democrats on the high-profile Oversight Committee, seeking to fill the spot vacated by the sudden death of Virginia Rep. Gerry Connolly. Into the void jumped a pair of young, ambitious members — Jasmine Crockett of Texas and Robert Garcia of California — as well as a close Connolly ally, Stephen Lynch of Massachusetts. And then there's Mfume, who at 76 is making no bones about this being the capstone of a long career that included stints leading the Congressional Black Caucus and the NAACP — jobs he took back in the 1990s. 'I started a long time ago when dinosaurs roamed the earth,' Mfume joked in an interview, before describing his old-school approach to legislative relations: 'The first thing you learn is how to count votes, which has never failed me yet,' he said, adding that he would be careful not to alienate colleagues 'by doing something that causes problems for them in their district.' Rather than detail a point-by-point agenda for taking on President Donald Trump and congressional Republicans, Mfume said if elected he'd convene the committee's Democrats to decide a course of action. The party, he said, can only move forward with a 'consensus.' That style stands in sharp contrast to a Democratic base that's itching for more aggressive leadership and a more visible fight with Trump — something the other candidates are clearly heeding: Garcia has tangled with the Justice Department over his criticism of Elon Musk; Crockett has broached the prospect of a Trump impeachment inquiry; and Lynch, as the panel's interim top Democrat, attempted last week to subpoena Musk during a panel hearing. The race also threatens to become a proxy fight for broader questions about age and seniority inside the Democratic Party. House Democrats ousted several aging committee leaders at the end of last Congress as they girded for a fight with the Trump administration — and many in the base were disappointed when Connolly triumphed over Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York. The winner is poised to lead efforts to investigate and thwart the Trump administration if Democrats can retake the House majority next year — and ride herd on a chaotic panel that in recent months has featured intense personal attacks between lawmakers and the display of nude photos. 'It's a street fight every day,' said Rep. Lateefah Simon of California when asked about the panel and what it takes to lead it. 'It's every single day being able to expose the hypocrisy of this administration and to tell the truth.' There was a time when Mfume would have been a natural choice for such a moment. First elected to Baltimore's City Council at the age of 30, he quickly butted heads with legendary Mayor William Donald Schaefer. After longtime Rep. Parren Mitchell retired, Mfume easily won the seat in 1986 and within a few years become a national figure due to his chairmanship of the CBC. Ascending to that role just as Bill Clinton was elected to the presidency, he became an important power broker, forcing key concessions in Clinton's 1993 budget and pushing the White House to restore ousted Haitian president Jean-Bertrand Aristide to power. He also clashed with Clinton at times, including over his decision to pull the nomination of prominent Black legal scholar Lani Guinier to a top Justice Department post. But after Democrats lost their House majority in 1994 — and Mfume lost a quixotic bid to enter the party leadership — he decided two years later to forgo a long climb up the seniority ladder. He instead took the helm at the Baltimore-based NAACP, a job thought to better harness his skills at organizing and oratory. Former Maryland state Sen. Jill Carter said Mfume has long had the 'it factor' and 'charisma' that matters in politics. When Carter ran against Mfume in his 2020 House comeback bid, she got a reminder of how well her rival was known in the district and beyond: 'When some of my people did exit polling, they got the response, 'Oh, we love Jill but, come on, this is Kweisi.'' What's less clear is whether Mfume's reputation in Baltimore, burnished over 45 years in the public eye, makes him the man for the moment as far as his contemporary House colleagues are concerned. He's not known as a partisan brawler, and he said in the interview he doesn't intend to become one. 'There are always going to be fights and disagreements,' he said. 'It's kind of escalated in the last few years to a level that we haven't seen before. I think the main thing is to moderate and to manage the disagreements, because you're not going to cause any of them to go away. How you manage them and how they are perceived by the overall public is what makes a difference.' Mfume is leaning heavily, in fact, on the style and reputation of the man who filled the 7th District seat for the 24 years in between his House stints — the late Rep. Elijah Cummings, who served as top Democrat and then chair of Oversight during Trump's first term and is still spoken of in reverent terms inside the caucus. Mfume concedes that Cummings might have been the better communicator — he 'had a little more preacher in him than I do' — but said they share a similar lofty approach to politics. Like Cummings, he suggested prescription drug prices might be a committee priority. What Mfume is unlikely to have is the official support of the Congressional Black Caucus, a powerful force in intracaucus politics. With two members in the race — Crockett also belongs — Mfume said he does not expect a formal CBC endorsement after an interview process Wednesday. But he still expected to draw support from the bloc — especially its more senior members. Other factors complicate Mfume's candidacy. One is age: He is a year older than Connolly was when he was elected to lead Oversight Democrats last year. For those who prize seniority, Lynch has actually spent more time on the panel. And his 2004 departure from the NAACP was marred by controversy: The Baltimore Sun reported the executive committee of the group voted not to extend his contract under threat of a sexual harassment lawsuit; the NAACP later paid the woman who complained a $100,000 settlement. Mfume strenuously denied any wrongdoing, but while the episode has not emerged as a major issue in the Oversight race, some Democrats have privately expressed reservations about elevating a leader with personal baggage to potentially lead investigations of Trump. 'There's never been one person to corroborate that one allegation — not one,' Mfume said. About the payment, he said, 'I found out about it, quite frankly, after it happened.' Much of the Democratic Caucus remains undecided ahead of the June 24 secret-ballot vote. Candidates will first go before Democrats' Steering and Policy Committee, which will make a recommendation to the full caucus. 'I think that you have a situation where Mfume and Steve Lynch are getting support from folks who put seniority at top, and maybe the other two candidates would probably lean toward members who are newer, and then you got a whole host of folks that's in the middle. And I think that's where the battle is to see where they fall,' said Rep. Greg Meeks (D-N.Y.). One younger member said he was swayed by Mfume's experience. Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), who is 48 and had weighed his own bid, said that while other candidates were compelling, the Baltimorean had a 'leg up.' 'Kweisi shows me pictures of him with Nelson Mandela,' he said. 'I was like, I'm not going to run against Nelson Mandela's best friend.'

New Jersey primaries: Trump-backed Ciattarelli wins GOP nod; Sherrill wins Dem nomination
New Jersey primaries: Trump-backed Ciattarelli wins GOP nod; Sherrill wins Dem nomination

USA Today

time35 minutes ago

  • USA Today

New Jersey primaries: Trump-backed Ciattarelli wins GOP nod; Sherrill wins Dem nomination

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'We will do everything in our power to unite the party and defeat Republican extremists like Jack Ciattarelli.' -- Savannah Kuchar Shortly after Ciattarelli clinched the Republican nomination for governor, the Democratic Governors Association released a statement bashing the former state legislator over his endorsement from the president. 'Ciattarelli's about-face to unequivocally embrace Donald Trump and his refusal to stand up to his party's extreme, costly, and unpopular agenda are too extreme for New Jersey,' said DGA Senior Communications Advisor Izzi Levy. 'Between now and November, we will make sure voters remember why they rejected his last two statewide bids.' Ciattarelli is a previous Trump critic turned presidential endorsee. In 2015, he called Trump a GOP 'charlatan.' This year, in Ciattarelli's third run for governor, Trump offered his full vocal support, including in a telephone rally with voters. Republican State Leadership Committee President Edith Jorge-Tuñón congratulated Ciattarelli in a statement Tuesday evening, and said, 'With New Jersey Republicans rallying around Jack Ciattarelli, we are well positioned to hold Democrats accountable for their poor record and work to deliver the real change that has been promised.' -- Savannah Kuchar Mikie Sherrill, a former Navy pilot and federal prosecutor, has won the Democratic nomination for New Jersey governor, according to projections from The Washington Post and the Associated Press She beat out five party competitors, in what was the most competitive gubernatorial primary this year. Sherrill is will face Republican Jack Ciattarelli in the November general. -- Savannah Kuchar Jack Ciattarelli won the GOP nomination in New Jersey's 2025 gubernatorial election, as results from the primary trickle in. The race was called by the Washington Post and Associated Press shortly after polls closed. He earned Trump's backing in May and came into Election Day with a strong frontrunner status. Ciattarelli previously served as a member of the New Jersey general assembly and has run two prior campaigns for governor. In 2021, he came within 3 points of unseating current Gov. Phil Murphy, who is now term limited. – Savannah Kuchar More: Trump-backed candidate wins Republican nomination in New Jersey governor's race Polls are now closed in New Jersey's 2025 primaries. Results are expected later this evening and will determine both parties' nominees for governor. Republicans may have their nominee sooner, with former state assemblyman Jack Ciattarelli polling well ahead of his GOP competitors. -- Savannah Kuchar Polls will close in New Jersey at 8 p.m. ET on June 10. Once voting is over, New Jersey Republicans and Democrats alike will wait to learn who their official nominee for governor is in 2025. Those nominees face off later this year on November 4. – Savannah Kuchar New Jersey is one of two states with a gubernatorial race in 2025, along with Virginia. Both states typically hold their state elections in off years, between presidential and mid-term elections. This year, they are widely viewed as the first real temperature check on voters' moods and key issues since November 2024. Following the June 10 primaries in New Jersey, Virginia will host theirs June 17. While New Jersey has a crowded field of candidates vying for the governor's mansion on both sides of the aisle, Virginia's top of ticket race has been set since April. Former Rep. Abigail Spanberger, a Democrat, will face Virginia's Republican Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears this fall. – Savannah Kuchar One area where Democrats vying to be New Jersey's next governor seem to agree are opposing President Trump's response to the anti-ICE demonstrations in California. The president's move to deploy Marines and the National Guard has sparked arguably the most significant showdown with a Democratic governor since his return to the White House. California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Tuesday, for example, filed an emergency motion seeking to limit the use of troops. On the New Jersey campaign trail, Sherrill and Gottheimer condemned Trump and defended Newsom's actions, according to Fox News. Baraka, as has been mentioned, has already made headlines after being detained outside an ICE facility last month. He has filed suit against the U.S. Attorney in New Jersey, claiming it was 'false arrest, malicious prosecution and defamation." New Jersey Education Association President Sean Spiller, one of the longshot contenders, said in a June 9 post on X that if elected he wouldn't 'bend down' to Trump's tactics. 'What's happening in the streets of (Los Angeles) is not normal and we shouldn't act like it is,' Spiller said. 'From ICE tearing apart families to the President sending out the National Guard -- over the objection of the Governor -- and now apparently contemplating deploying Marines on our people - we have to stand up in solidarity and defend our democracy.' — Phillip M. Bailey Trump has owned property in Bedminster, New Jersey, since 2002. However, the president is not expected to vote in the Garden State's election. In the 2024 presidential election, Trump cast a ballot for himself from Palm Beach, part of Florida's 22nd Congressional District. USA TODAY has reached out to the White House to confirm Trump is still registered to vote in the Sunshine State. A recent inspection at Trump's ritzy golf club, located on 500-plus-acres in central New Jersey, found more than a dozen health code violations. According to a May 6 report, raw meat was improperly refrigerated, some handwashing stations lacked soap and the person in charge failed to "demonstrate knowledge of food safety." -- Savannah Kuchar and Zachary Schermele One political figure you'd think would have a lot to say about picking the Garden State's next leader is Republican Chris Christie, whose brash-style pre-dated the Trump era. The verbose former governor, who led New Jersey from 2010-2018 and twice ran for president unsuccessfully, hasn't endorsed anyone in this year's contest. He also was quiet across his socials as voters flocked to the polls Tuesday. Asked last week if he planned to support anyone, Christie told The Star-Ledger: 'I haven't decided yet.' Christie mentioned having a 'great working relationship' with Brammick, a Republican state legislator, but he mostly warned the GOP that independents -- who will be critical in the fall for any Republican -- may sour on Trump by the fall. 'If those independents have become disenchanted with what's happening in Washington under Donald Trump, that will put a significant headwind onto Republicans,' he said. — Phillip M. Bailey Rep. Mikie Sherrill is the frontrunner coming into Tuesday evening. In a May poll by Emerson College and The Hill, Sherrill was ahead with 28% of voters' support. She faces Jersey City Mayor Steve Fulop, Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, and fellow member of Congress Josh Gottheimer, all of whom were sitting at 11% support in last month's poll. New Jersey Education Association President Sean Spiller and former state Sen. President Steve Sweeney are also in the running. -- Savannah Kuchar This race is particularly important for national Democrats because it will be the first major competitive primary since their shattering defeat in the 2024 presidential race. A poll conducted by Emerson College in May found among registered Democratic voters, Sherrill had a solid lead with 28%, but another 24% were undecided. In the last weeks of the race she has faced attack ads for accepting donations linked from a corporate PAC tied to SpaceX, which is owned by Trump 'frienemy' Elon Musk. Newark Mayor Ras Baraka has pitched himself as the candidate most willing to take on Trump. He was thrust into the national spotlight in May after a confrontation with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement at a federal facility But if electability remains a worry then N.J. Democrats may bet on a safer choice such as U.S. Rep. Josh Gottheimer, who co-founded a bipartisan group dubbed the "Problem Solvers Caucus" that tries to sniff out consensus in Congress. Others in the race, such as Jersey City Mayor Steve Fulop, are looking for an opening, too. He's been running as a 'pragmatic progressive' for voters fed up with the state's political machine. — Phillip M. Bailey Current New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, a Democrat, is term-limited and cannot run again in this year's race. Murphy has served as top official in the state since 2018 and will conclude his second consecutive term next January. His absence from the race leaves the contest wide open for either party to claim the governor's mansion. The president first announced his support for Ciattarelli in a Truth Social post on May 12. 'Jack Ciattarelli is a terrific America First Candidate running to be the next Governor of a State that I love, NEW JERSEY!' Trump wrote. 'Jack, who after getting to know and understand MAGA, has gone ALL IN, and is now 100%' The two have not always been the best of buds publicly. In 2015, Ciattarelli called Trump a "charlatan." Then in his second campaign for governor in 2021, he kept the then-former president at arm's length. Bygones appear to be bygones, though. Trump told voters in a telephone rally on June 2 Ciattarelli "is the most experienced and battle-tested" candidate.

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