Page 4A OPINION East Oregonian Friday, November 25, 2016 Founded October 16, 1875 KATHRYN B. BROWN Publisher DANIEL WATTENBURGER Managing Editor TIM TRAINOR Opinion Page Editor MARISSA WILLIAMS Regional Advertising Director MARCY ROSENBERG Circulation Manager JANNA HEIMGARTNER Business Office Manager MIKE JENSEN Production Manager OUR VIEW Tip of the hat; kick in the pants A tip of the hat to everyone who slept in this morning, avoiding the Black Friday crowds and especially those “sales events” that stretched into Thanksgiving proper. Although everyone appreciates a good deal, we should appreciate time with friends and family even more. That’s what holidays should always be about, and Thanksgiving especially so. It’s one day a year we set aside to feel grateful for the things we have — a mountain of food on the table and the people who have chosen to share in the gluttony of the meal. And the leftovers — thank God for the leftovers, the best thing about the day after Thanksgiving. We shouldn’t exchange the pleasure of over- indulgence for long lines in pitch-black parking lots, nor hustling through department stores in a competitive rush to save a few bucks. In addition, skipping that day allows our family members and neighbors who work in retail to enjoy the holiday too. Nothing like having to show up at work at 4 a.m. to impede on your enjoyment of Thanksgiving. Simply, our national slow-food holiday is more necessary than ever. That rat race that precedes Christmas is right around the corner, but we should all stand firm by keeping it away from our beloved Thanksgiving. The shopping season will get here soon enough, and people should look to support local businesses that circulate their dollars in the local area, and allow their employees to spend their holiday with family and friends. A tip of the hat, too, to all the people who volunteered at one of the many free Thanksgiving Day meals in our area. From Boardman to Hermiston to Pendleton and places in between, there was no reason not to join a community meal where everyone was welcome. Lack of family or funds wasn’t an issue. As we said above, spending Thanksgiving with the ones you love is important. And if the ones you love is the community at large — people who were strangers just the day before — then you’re well on your way to making this world a better place. This community appreciates it, and you surely made some people happy yesterday. Unsigned editorials are the opinion of the East Oregonian editorial board of publisher Kathryn Brown, managing editor Daniel Wattenburger, and opinion page editor Tim Trainor. Other columns, letters and cartoons on this page express the opinions of the authors and not necessarily that of the East Oregonian. OTHER VIEWS Dealing with the death penalty The Oregonian F ive years ago, former Gov. John Kitzhaber made an announcement that was as bold as it was surprising: His voice shaking with emotion, Kitzhaber declared that he would not allow any executions to take place as long as he was governor. The decision immediately halted the impending execution of death-row inmate Gary Haugen, who had waived his legal appeals to protest the justice system. But it was also meant to kickstart a statewide conversation about the legitimacy of the death penalty in Oregon, a punishment so rarely carried out that only two of 63 people sentenced to die since 1984 have been executed. Both men, like Haugen, were volunteers. But five years and a new governor later, the debate Kitzhaber envisioned hasn’t begun. Meanwhile, the death- penalty machinery continues to run, with prosecutors seeking death sentences, juries granting them and the state spending millions in legal challenges, fighting for the right to execute someone who most likely will never be executed. Tuesday’s anniversary of the moratorium marked yet another year of missed opportunity. There is, however, no better time than now to start changing that trajectory. Two studies, one by the Oregon Justice Resource Center and one by Gov. Kate Brown’s general counsel’s office, provide some ammunition for doing so. First is cost: The Oregon Justice Resource Center, an anti-death penalty legal-services nonprofit, funded a study to quantify the cost of the death penalty to taxpayers, although it captured only some of the expenses. But the data it gathered showed that aggravated murder cases that resulted in death sentences cost taxpayers almost $1 million more than those that don’t, as The Oregonian/OregonLive’s Tony Hernandez reported. That’s not even including the cost of housing them in separate death-row quarters, a statistic that the Department of Corrections doesn’t split out from the overall prison population. The second piece comes from a report compiled by Brown’s general counsel. The report, which includes fascinating accounts of the preparations state officials undertook for Haugen’s planned execution, detail significant legal, medical and logistical issues if Oregon were to resume executions. Among the chief problems: Manufacturers of drugs used in the lethal injection sequence are no longer making them or selling them to prisons. All of this helps bolster the case for having this discussion. And while Brown has said she opposes the death penalty and will continue the moratorium, she hasn’t signaled that she will drive the debate any further. Her spokesman, Bryan Hockaday, said her priority now is on the state’s budget and that she has not identified any legislative priorities relating to the death penalty. Certainly, the $1.7 billion budget shortfall that the state faces is and should be her primary focus. But the projected deficit also highlights why she and other leaders must move the death-penalty debate forward. The state’s spending on such prosecutions that seek a theoretical punishment is the definition of wasting taxpayer money. A good start would be in getting our arms around what we don’t know. For example, Lewis & Clark Law School professor Aliza Kaplan, who was one of the authors of the report, notes that prosecutors don’t tally the hours they spend on a case. The state could direct district attorneys’ offices to start tracking their time per case, just as lawyers in private practice bill clients for their work. Similarly, the Department of Corrections could break out the portion that it devotes to death-row operations, which require more intensive management or special arrangements that aren’t in place for the general prison population. The governor’s report, for instance, noted that death-row inmates generally aren’t allowed to leave their cells to seek medical care, requiring that medical staff visit inmates there each week. Getting better data is something both supporters and opponents of capital punishment should get behind. It simply makes no sense to spend millions of dollars on a system that doesn’t do what it says it will do. It’s equally nonsensical to refuse to even talk about it. Five years after a moratorium, Oregon still hasn’t had a conversation about the death penalty. OTHER VIEWS Attorney General Jeff Sessions is Democrats’ worst nightmare resident-elect Trump’s transition “forced local ICE offices to release of team knew that nominating Jeff thousands of deportable criminals,” Sessions for Attorney General Vaughan has noted, “including Eswin would set off controversy. Democrats Mejia, an illegal alien with prior and their allies in the press have at arrests who killed 21-year old Sarah key times in the past called Sessions Root in Omaha, Neb., while drag- a racist — they’re now using the racing drunk in January of this year. Alabama senator’s full name, Jefferson Like many of the 86,000 convicted Beauregard Sessions III, to heighten criminals released by ICE since 2013, Byron the Old South effect — and now, as Mejia is now a fugitive but considered York they oppose Trump at nearly every a ‘non-criminal,’ because he has yet Comment turn, they’ve turned to race again. to be tried and convicted for Root’s Here’s why the effort to stop death.” Sessions is likely to intensify as his President Trump could throw PEP out confirmation hearings near. Sessions is the the window. And that would be just a start. Senate’s highest-profile, most determined, The Center for Immigration Studies has and most knowledgeable opponent of published a list of 79 Obama policies the new comprehensive immigration reform. administration could change without any Democrats are particularly anxious about action by Congress. (The list was compiled in immigration because of the unusually tenuous April 2016, before anyone could know who nature of President Obama’s policies on the next president would be.) Among them: the issue. Those policies can be undone 1) End the embargo on worksite unilaterally, by the new president in some enforcement. “Experience has shown cases, and by the attorney general and head of that employers respond very quickly and homeland security in other cases. There’s no voluntarily implement compliance measures need for congressional action — and no way when there is an uptick in enforcement,” for House or Senate Democrats to slow or stop Vaughan notes, “because they see the potential it. damage to their operations and public image There are extensive, and in some cases, for being caught and prosecuted.” strict immigration laws on the books, passed 2) Restore ICE’s authority to make by bipartisan majorities of Congress. Obama expedited removals of illegal immigrants who wanted Congress to change those laws. are felons or who have recently crossed into Congress declined. So Obama stopped the United States. enforcing provisions of the law that he did 3) Tighten requirements for H-1B visas, not like. A new administration could simply including banning such visas for low-salary, resume enforcement of the law — a move low-skill jobs, revoking visas that are followed that by itself would bring a huge change to by layoffs of American workers, and other immigration practices in the United States. No measures. congressional approval needed. 4) Stop suing states that take action to There are laws providing for the support immigration enforcement, and instead deportation of people who entered the U.S. support such enforcement. After Arizona’s illegally. Laws providing for the deportation famous SB 1070 law, Obama cracked down, of people who entered the U.S. illegally and arguing that the federal government has the later committed crimes. Laws for enforcing sole authority to enforce immigration law, and immigration compliance at the worksite. Laws also to not enforce immigration law. President for immigrants who have illegally overstayed Trump could choose to enforce the law. their visas for coming to the United States. 5) Force sanctuary cities to observe the law. Laws requiring local governments to comply Trump campaigned extensively on the subject with federal immigration law. And more. of sanctuary cities, mentioning San Francisco Many of those laws have been loosened murder victim Kate Steinle in many speeches. or, in some cases, completely ignored Attorney General Sessions could enforce an by the Obama administration. A Trump existing law, 8 USC 1373, which prohibits administration would not need to ask local communities from banning their officials Congress to pass any new laws to deal with from cooperating with federal immigration illegal immigration. authorities. If there was a presidential order involved Those are just a few of the things a Trump in Obama’s non-enforcement, Trump could administration, and an Attorney General undo it, and if there were Justice Department Sessions, could do using executive authority. directives involved, Sessions could undo It’s not hard to see why Democrats want to them, and if there are Department of stop them. Homeland Security directives involved, the Of course, Democrats on the Senate still-to-be-nominated secretary could undo Judiciary Committee, which will handle the them. Sessions nomination, cannot very well say to “It will be possible for the Trump the nominee: “I will not support you because administration to dramatically increase you might actually enforce the law.” So enforcement of immigration laws by using they need another basis on which to oppose what is now on the books,” notes Jessica Sessions. That’s where 30-plus year-old Vaughan, director of policy studies at the allegations come in. Center for Immigration Studies, which Republicans, with a narrow majority in the advocates reducing immigration into the U.S. Senate, should be able confirm their colleague, One of the immediate changes would be especially since soon-to-be-former Sen. Harry Reid nuked the minority’s ability to filibuster to get rid of Obama’s Priority Enforcement executive branch nominations. But before that Program, instituted in 2014. Known as PEP, the program made it almost happens, look for the noise and the anger over the Sessions nomination to increase. There’s impossible for Immigration and Customs too much at stake for Democrats to go along. Enforcement to even begin deportation ■ proceedings until an illegal immigrant has Byron York is chief political correspondent been convicted of an aggravated felony or for The Washington Examiner. multiple misdemeanors. Obama’s policy P