Home » How Did a State Known for Its War on Immigrants Approve In-State Tuition for Undocumented Students?
News

How Did a State Known for Its War on Immigrants Approve In-State Tuition for Undocumented Students?

Angelica Hernandez poses for a photo at the Arizona State University campus.Ross D. Franklin/AP

Fight disinformation: Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily newsletter and follow the news that matters.

Jose PatiƱo remembers how his mother cried when the acceptance letter from Arizona State University arrived in the mail in late 2006. There it was, the ultimate reward for her sonā€™s hard work and the reason why they had sacrificed so much by leaving Mexico when he was six years old. He had not just been accepted, he received a full scholarship offer. PatiƱo was on the way to becoming the first member of his undocumented family to get a college degree. ā€œI had never seen her that happy,ā€ PatiƱo says.

But their happiness proved short-lived. A few months later, PatiƱo received a different letter from the university stating that his tuition had tripled, and he no longer qualified for the scholarship. That abrupt change was a direct result of Proposition 300, a successful ballot measure that made university studentsĀ in Arizona who were not US citizens or permanent residents and those lacking legal status ineligible for in-state tuition and federal and state financial aid. The referendum was approved with 72 percent of votes in November 2006. ā€œIā€™m going to figure out a way,ā€ PatiƱo told his mother at the time. ā€œIt will be difficult, but Iā€™ll figure it out.ā€

PatiƱo, now the education and external affairs director of the Arizona-based immigrant youth-led group Aliento, did figure it out. He went on to attend ASU on a private scholarship set up byĀ university administrators sympathetic to the plight of undocumented students in Arizona.Ā He received a bachelorā€™s degree in mechanical engineering, and then a masterā€™s degree in secondary education from Grand Canyon University. But the impact of Proposition 300 was profound. A 2011Ā analysis by ASUā€™s Cronkite NewsĀ found that between the Spring of 2007 and the Fall of 2010, the number of students without proof of citizenship in public universities in the state plummeted from 1,524 to 106. Proposition 300 effectively made college education unattainable for manyĀ of Arizonaā€™s low-income undocumented youth.Ā 

Sixteen years later, that could change. The majority of voters in ArizonaĀ during the recent midterm elections were in favor ofĀ Proposition 308, a ballot measure that repealed provisions from Proposition 300 and opened the way for any high school graduate, regardless of immigration status, living in Arizona for at least two years, to access in-state tuition rates at state universities and community colleges. By some estimates, as many as 3,600 students might benefit from the policy every year. The successful ballot measure received 1,250,319 ā€œyesā€ votesā€”or about 51 percentā€”a little shy of the 1,287,890 votes received by Gov. Katie Hobbs.Ā That result puts Arizona alongside 22 other states and the District of Columbia that allow undocumented students to pay tuition on par with their US-born peers.Ā 

ā€œThe beauty and the pain of this campaign,ā€ says PatiƱo, who worked on the legislative proposal referring Proposition 308 to the ballot, ā€œis that the people advocating, finding sponsors for the bill, getting the legislature to pass it, and talking to voters were the same people [Proposition 300] was intended to bury.ā€Ā 

Considering its long history of policies and legislation openly hostile to immigrants and Latinos, Arizona would seem an unlikely place for a pro-immigrant measure to succeed. Indeed, Proposition 300 was only one of a series of restrictive proposals aimed at excluding and punishing foreign-born people that appeared in the early 2000s. Such efforts fell under what became known as ā€œattrition through enforcement,ā€ a harsh anti-immigration strategy championed by Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach and once supported by then-presidential hopeful Mitt Romney. Its basic premise was to make the lives of undocumented peopleĀ in the United States so miserable they would simply leave, or ā€œself-deport.ā€Ā 

Between 2004 and 2006, voters in Arizona approved ballot measures requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote and access state and local public benefits. One initiative denied bail to people charged with felonies and believed to have entered the country without authorization,Ā and anotherĀ made English the stateā€™s official language and prohibitedĀ undocumented immigrants who won civil lawsuits from receiving punitive damages. ā€œYou are not going to come to America and get some lottery payout,ā€ said then-Republican State Rep. Russell Pearce, who had been the main force behind most anti-immigrant initiatives in the state.

That anti-immigrant drive in Arizona reached its apex in 2010 with one of the most, if not the most, draconian legislation in the country. Informally known as the ā€œshow me your papersā€ law, SB 1070 required law enforcement to ask for proof of legal status if they suspected someone was undocumented. It also gave police the authority to arrest, without a warrant, those they believed to be ā€œdeportable.ā€ That same year, Republican Gov. Jan Brewer signed a law, later ruled unconstitutional, banning a Mexican-American studies program in the Tucson school district.Ā 

By then, Pearce, who authored SB 1070, was Arizonaā€™s senate president and largely regarded as the most powerful politician in the state. Although the Supreme Court partially struck down the racialĀ profiling legislation in 2012, it nevertheless made Arizona ground zero in the war on immigrants and spurred concerns of an ā€œArizonification of Americaā€ with other states enacting copycat laws.Ā 

But how did Arizona become what the former Daily Show host Jon Stewart called ā€œthe meth lab of democracyā€?Ā Kristina Campbell, a professor at the University of the District of Columbia-David A. Clarke School of Law who lived in Arizona in the early 2000s, argues that it was a combination of ā€œpower, corruption, and white supremacy.ā€ She had a thorough exposure to all three in her previous job. Prior to the passage of SB 1070, Campbell had worked as a staff attorney for the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF), a Los Angeles-based Latino legal civil rights organization. ā€œWhat I did most was sue Sheriff Joe Arpaio,ā€ she says. ā€œI mean, talk about a reign of terror.ā€

Arpaio, an immigration hard-liner and self-proclaimed ā€œAmericaā€™s toughest sheriff,ā€ ruled over Maricopa County, Arizonaā€™s most populous county, for more than two decades. (Pearce served under Arpaio as chief deputy.) He became notorious for housing inmates in so-called tent city jails in the desert and conducting discriminatory sweeping raids and traffic stops targeting Latinos. In 2017, a federal judge convicted Arpaio of criminal contempt after he violated a court order to stop the racial profiling practice. Soon after, the disgraced sheriff became the first person to be pardoned byĀ one of his biggest fans, then-President Donald Trump.Ā 

PatiƱo has memories of the climate of fear while he was growing up. He would see signs on buses with a number to call to report unauthorized immigrants. Or he would hear alerts on the radio about the location of immigration enforcement checkpoints so people could avoid them. ā€œYou canā€™t let your guard down,ā€ he says, describing a survival mode mindset that became normalized because ā€œeveryone you know is going through it.ā€ But all those years of relentless assault on immigrants and Latino communities took a toll and ignited a movement. ā€œThere was a lot of crying all the time,ā€ he says. ā€œWe came out of the shadows because we were tired of being afraid.ā€Ā 

The passage of SB 1070 served as a catalyst for change. Perhaps the best indication of that came in late 2011 with the once unimaginable ousting of Pearce, the first-ever Arizona legislator to be recalled. Voters rejectedĀ him with 55 percent of votes in a recall election interpreted, as theĀ New York Times put it, ā€œas a sign that Republican politicians like Mr. Pearce were pushing too far with their get-tough approach to illegal immigration and that there were consequences if they did not get in sync with voter concerns.ā€

In describing the historic campaign spearheaded by organizer Randy Parraz, Jeff Biggers, the author of the 2012 book State Out of the Union: Arizona and the Final Showdown Over the American Dream, said in an interview for Democracy Now!,Ā ā€œThere was this new generation of young Latinos willing now to work with these new Baby Boomers who were retiring in Arizona and come together and take on extremism and win.ā€ They represented,Ā he noted, the rise of the ā€œother Arizona,ā€ one that posed resistance to the ā€œheadline-grabbing nativists, frontier justice sheriffs, neo-Nazi marchers, gun-toting militiamen, and Tea Party political figures.ā€ And they won again when Arpaio lost his reelection bid in 2016. At the age of 90, he tried to make another comeback this year running for mayor of 25,000-people Fountain Hillsā€”butĀ he was defeated by two-term Democratic incumbent Ginny Dickey.Ā 

ā€œWhy has this change happened and why has it happened so relatively fast?ā€ asks Campbell. ā€œI have to give credit to the young generation that is not afraid to take on that type of intimidation, harassment, and discrimination. They have made some changes I never thought would happen in Arizona.ā€

For many, the idea of restoring in-state tuition and financial aid for undocumented studentsĀ seemed to be a long shot. Reyna Montoya, the founder of Aliento, recalls people laughing at the idea. ā€œThey didnā€™t think this was possible,ā€ she says. ā€œWe got pushback even from some organizations because they didnā€™t think the timing was right.ā€

The first step was for legislation to put the proposal on the ballot to be passed by the conservative Republican legislature. Previous attempts going back to 2018 failed to find a Republican legislator to sponsor the bill or even to get a hearing in the House. It wasnā€™t until 2021 thatĀ advocatesĀ were able to make progress, but not without reservations from both sides of the aisle. For some Democrats, the proposal didnā€™t go far enough as it didnā€™t constitute a full repeal of the original ballot initiative that additionally hindered access to adult education and childcare assistance. Meanwhile, Republicans pushed back against the financial aid provision. But in May 2021, the resolution introduced by Republican State Sen. Paul Boyer moved forward in the House on a 33-27 vote, with four Republicans supporting it.

ā€œWow, so we did it,ā€ Boyer said at a press conference. ā€œItā€™s a rarity when you can say you passed a piece of legislation that truly changes lives, and this bill changes about 2,000 lives every single year. We are standing on the shoulders of giants.ā€Ā 

Once the legislative hurdle was behind them, it was a matter of building on years of community organizing to educate voters about the initiative, which was one of 10 measures on the ballot. Most people PatiƱo and Montoya talked to in the lead-up to the election didnā€™t know access to in-state tuition for undocumented students was an issue, let alone one that they could vote on it. PatiƱo remained hopeful but skeptical until the last minute. ā€œThis is still Arizona and immigration is still a big issue,ā€ he told me. ā€œPeople are going to have camps already that they are going to be in because of the years and years of rhetoric that we have heard pro and anti. I knew it was going to be close.ā€Ā 

On November 14,Ā a week after Election Day, the votes were finally counted and their victory became official. ā€œIt gives me a lot of hope that we can make big transformational changes for the community,ā€ says PatiƱo. ā€œIt may take longer than we would want to, but we can do it.ā€

Newsletter

November 2022
M T W T F S S
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
282930