So, Arizona passed a bill that would make it a misdemeanor crime to not have your immigration paperwork on you if you're an immigrant in Arizona. It also allows police officers to check into someone's immigration status if they have "reasonable suspicion" to do so.
Now, I'm not judging the bill itself, but the following sentence caught my attention.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld ... 7282.storyQuote:
Some Republicans have privately complained about the bill, which Pearce has been pushing for several years, but were loath to vote against it in an election year.
Ignore the 'Republican' part, because I don't care about that. It burns my nuts that legislators would be against a bill, but vote for in ANYWAY because of an upcoming election. I'm not naive, I know that this is common and happens all the time at all levels of government. It just sickens me when I see it spelled out like that.
If you think a bill is bad, vote against it. If you think it's good, vote for it. If only it could ever be that simple.