The Obama administration believes that an inability to speak
English is a civil right. It is even more distressing that the
administration, legally speaking, may be right.
In April President Obama's Department of Justice threatened
to cut off federal funding to Oklahoma if that state's
voters approve a state constitutional amendment making
English Oklahoma's official language, Sen. James Inhofe
(R-Oklahoma)
revealed.
The threat came in the form of a
letter (PDF) from Acting Assistant Attorney General Loretta
King to Oklahoma Attorney General Drew Edmondson. King wrote
that "implementation of this amendment may conflict with
Oklahoma's obligations to protect the civil rights of limited
English proficient (LEP) persons."
This would mean that such people, LEPs, have not only a federal
right not to learn English but a right to have
government services provided to them in languages other
than English.
The
Tulsa World reports that the wording of the proposed
constitutional amendment has been changed since King's letter to
Edmondson and that as a consequence of the change the Department
of Justice no longer considers it to violate the Civil Rights Act
of 1964.