The state's decision is the opposite from Arizona's, where Republican Gov. Jan Brewer signed an executive order outlawing driver's licenses for anyone who benefits from the new federal deportation relief.
The starkly different responses shows the benefits of the federal directive could vary depending on where immigrants live.
The Obama administration left it to states to decide whether to issue driver's licenses and offer in-state college tuition rates and other services to people who came here illegally as children but now are eligible for work permits.
Arizona was the first to say no, and California -- home to more than 400,000 young immigrants expected to qualify -- one of the first to say yes when deportation relief became available this week.
Muzaffar Chishti of the Migration Policy Institute expects a flurry of activity in state capitals this month as governors and lawmakers follow the lines drawn by California and Arizona.
"Immigration is a federal issue," Chishti said. "How you treat immigrants within your state is a state issue."
Licenses also are purely a state matter, another expert said.
"The Constitution says nothing about driver's licenses," said Jacob Vigdor, a professor at Duke University's
Sanford School of Public Policy. "Back in the 1780s, it wasn't an issue. So it's completely at the discretion of states."And, Vigdor said, the federal directive launched this week to help illegal immigrant students or high school graduates who are 30 or younger is accentuating the divide between some states' "anti-immigrant" climate and the "permissive, much more pragmatic" California approach.
California's 1993 ban on driver's licenses for illegal immigrants stands, but the DMV will treat as "temporary legal residents" those who qualify for deportation relief, DMV spokesman Mike Marando said Wednesday.
"California law is not changing. ... however those applicants approved by (the U.S. Department of Homeland Security) will become temporary legal residents," Marando said.
That did not sit well with Southern California Assemblyman Tim Donnelly, R-Hesperia.
"I think there's going to be a huge debate right here in California over that very issue," said Donnelly, a vocal opponent of illegal immigration. "The vast majority of Californians are adamantly opposed to giving driver's licenses to illegals."
Sixty-two percent of Californians opposed granting licenses to undocumented immigrants in 2005, the last time the Field Poll surveyed opinions on the topic. Californians then were evenly divided over a "different kind" of license that labeled them as non-residents.
Now, young immigrants with a job permit and Social Security card can prove legal residency to the DMV, Marando said.
Immigrant advocates celebrated California's move and denounced Arizona's.
Driving is essential for many California and Arizona workers, especially farm workers who travel far following crops, said Diana Tellefson Torres of the United Farm Workers Foundation.
Having licenses will let them move around freely without fear, she said.
A few states allow illegal immigrants to drive and others have no policy, but California is among the majority denying licenses to illegal residents.
Many such immigrants drive anyway, despite the risk of deportation, criminal charges, car impoundments and expensive penalties.
California's 1993 license prohibition applied to people who could not prove they were "a citizen or legal resident of the United States under federal law."
Signed by Republican Gov. Pete Wilson, the driving ban was a precursor to 1994's voter-approved Prop. 187, which excluded illegal immigrants from public schools and other services.
Judges overturned most of Prop. 187, but the driver ban has lasted nearly two decades despite some Democratic lawmakers' perennial attempts to overturn it.
Democratic Gov. Gray Davis in 2003 repealed the ban before voters recalled him. Weeks later, new Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and the Legislature restored it.
Assemblyman Gil Cedillo, D-Los Angeles, has fought for 15 years to repeal the 1993 law and wants to all undocumented immigrants able to drive legally.
"Every motorist in California should be licensed, tested and insured," he said. "That was our policy for 60 years."
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