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"All Arizona is saying is play by the rules," Bouma said. "Arizona is bearing the brunt of the federal government's failure to enforce it." Judge John Noonan, appointed by President Ronald Reagan, and Judge Richard Paez, appointed by President Bill Clinton, rounded out the appeals panel, which has no deadline to act. Hundreds of protesters gathers outside the federal courthouse in San Francisco before the hour-long hearing. Opponents of the law in this politically liberal city outnumbered supporters. Afterward, Arizona's governor said she intended to appeal any adverse ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court. Illegal immigrants are overwhelming Arizona's health care systems, schools and prisons, she said. The law and the federal lawsuit to overturn it have breathed new life into Brewer's re-election campaign against Democrat Terry Goddard, the state's attorney general. Brewer, a Republican, took office in January 2009 when Janet Napolitano became Homeland Security secretary. Brewer said the Obama administration's lawsuit was misguided because the state law seeks only to address a growing problem in Arizona. "We are not the enemy -- we are part of the United States," she said. "We need more help and support."
[Associated
Press;
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