Blue states are obsessed with protecting illegal-migrant criminals and only voters can make it stop

Blue-state governors are doing everything they can to keep the Biden immigration crime wave alive — and will keep it up until their voters make them stop. The latest atrocity: Virginia Gov.Abigail Spanberger failed to intervene to prevent the release of Jose Hernandez, an illegal from El Salvador arrested in March for molesting and abusing a 5-year-old girl then remanded on a measly $5,000 bond.Monsters that sick never stop at one victim; such low bail almost ensures Hernandez  will vanish once he hits the streets, free to rape more children. That’s how it goes in sanctuary jurisdictions like Virginia: The safety of law-abiding folks comes last, the “rights” (privileges!) of illegal immigrants come first.  Spanberger insists hers is not a sanctuary state, but her policies are explicitly meant to protect illegals.She ended Virginia’s 287(g) agreements, which ease co-operation of local law enforcement with ICE; she’s refused to veto bills to prohibit ICE from making arrests at courthouses; she’s into law a ban on ICE agents masking up — a move that lets lefty fanatics target them and their families.And she claims to be a moderate.So too does New York’s own Gov.

Kathy Hochul — who recently pushed through what may be the most radical anti-enforcement law in the country, barring even informal co-operation between local cops and ICE and banning ICE agents from wearing masks and from entering public parks.Gov.Gavin Newsom’s California issues commercial driver licenses to untrained and often non-English speaking illegals, who then cause horrific death and destruction by smashing trucks into passenger cars — as Biden-released Manvir Singh did in late May, the fourth illegal-immigrant truck driver with the last name “Singh” accused in a fatal crash since last year.Illinois Gov.

JB Pritzker’s allergy to locking up illegal criminals left Jose Medina-Medina free to murder New York-born college student Sheridan Gorman in Chicago in March: The ...

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Publisher: New York Post

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