New Mexico will host a meeting of U.S. and Mexican border governors,
providing a new venue for a conference that was scrapped in Arizona
because of a dispute over its new immigration enforcement law.
However, the governors of Arizona and Texas will not attend the
rescheduled meeting.
The meeting will be held in Santa Fe in late September, according to
Gilbert Gallegos, a spokesman for Gov. Bill Richardson.
The governors of six Mexican states are expected to attend, he said
Thursday.
Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer, a Republican, called off the meeting in
Phoenix after the Mexican governors planned to boycott it because of
Arizona's new immigration law.
The Mexican governors said in a June letter that Arizona's law
violated civil rights and they suggested moving the conference to
another state.
Annual meetings are held by the governors of Texas, New Mexico,
Arizona and California along with leaders of six Mexican states —
Coahuila, Chihuahua, Nuevo Leon, Sonora, Tamaulipas and Baja California.
The governors typically approve resolutions on issues ranging from
pollution and water to international trade and border violence.
Brewer spokesman Paul Senseman said the Arizona governor had no
plans to attend the meeting in Santa Fe, "but would certainly welcome
the Mexican and U.S. governors to attend the actual Border Governors
Conference in Arizona as they had all previously committed."
Texas Gov. Rick Perry, a Republican, also won't attend the meeting
in New Mexico.
"It was Arizona's turn to host this and he respected their decision
to cancel it. He still intends to have a working relationship with all
of the border governors," said Perry spokeswoman Katherine Cesinger.
California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger will attend. "It's a
productive conference and he's looking forward to it," said
Schwarzenegger spokesman Aaron McLear.
Richardson's spokesman, Gallegos, said in a statement, "Obviously,
all border governors are welcome and encouraged to attend, although the
governors of Arizona and Texas have said they are not interested in
joining a dialogue with their border colleagues."
The agenda and other details of the Santa Fe meeting are not
complete, according to Gallegos.
Richardson's announcement of the border governors' meeting came as a
federal judge in Phoenix considered a lawsuit against the Arizona law,
which takes effect July 29 unless blocked by a court.
The law requires police, while enforcing other laws, to question a
person's immigration status if officers have a reasonable suspicion that
the person is in the country illegally.
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