Repub­li­cans slam Biden migrant parole pro­gram: ‘Rife with fraud’

Repub­li­cans on the House Judi­cia­ry Com­mit­tee grilled Ur Jad­dou, head of the U.S. Cit­i­zen­ship and Immi­gra­tion Ser­vices (USCIS), on Wednes­day, slam­ming her lead­er­ship and the Biden admin­is­tra­tion for wav­ing in mass ille­gal immi­gra­tion and run­ning a human­i­tar­i­an parole pro­gram “rife with fraud.”

USCIS is a fed­er­al agency meant to over­see law­ful immi­gra­tion into the U.S.

“You total­ly blew it,” Texas Rep. Troy Nehls told Jad­dou.

“The Amer­i­can peo­ple are sick and tired, and you should all be fired. Well you will be short­ly because the Amer­i­can peo­ple said, ‘We ain’t going to tol­er­ate this any­more,’” he added.  

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Rep. Tom McClin­tock, head of the Sub­com­mit­tee on Immi­gra­tion Integri­ty, Secu­ri­ty, and Enforce­ment, also drilled into Jad­dou, say­ing: “If any­one won­ders why real wages for work­ing fam­i­lies have declined under this admin­is­tra­tion, look no fur­ther than the agency before us today.”

“Our sub­com­mit­tee,” he con­tin­ued, “has not­ed that in mil­lions of cas­es, cred­i­ble fear inter­views are not even con­duct­ed before migrants who have ille­gal­ly entered the coun­try are then released into the coun­try. How do you explain that?”

Jad­dou attempt­ed to explain by say­ing that USCIS, which pri­mar­i­ly receives its fund­ing from appli­cant fees, is under­fund­ed.

McClin­tock shot back that “until we opened our bor­ders those fees were more than ade­quate to con­duct those inter­views and under your admin­is­tra­tion, they’re not.”

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The chair­man took par­tic­u­lar issue with the Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezue­lans parole pro­gram – known as CHNV – which, accord­ing to a Novem­ber report by the sub­com­mit­tee, was used to allow more than 530,000 migrants from those coun­tries into the U.S.

The CHNV pro­gram was start­ed by the Biden admin­is­tra­tion in Jan­u­ary 2023 and allows up to 30,000 migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela to enter the U.S. each month. It was tem­porar­i­ly paused by the admin­is­tra­tion in July due to fraud con­cerns but then rein­stat­ed just weeks lat­er.  

“They took a parole author­i­ty that required case-by-case review of indi­vid­ual exi­gent cir­cum­stances to pro­vide tem­po­rary entry to the Unit­ed States and trans­formed it into a fraud-rid­den, mass admis­sion of more than half a mil­lion Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezue­lans up to 1,000 every day,” said McClin­tock.  

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McClin­tock also crit­i­cized USCIS for not prop­er­ly vet­ting CHNV spon­sors and allow­ing migrants to spon­sor each oth­er.

“Lit­er­al­ly one parolee can imme­di­ate­ly arrive in this coun­try, receive indef­i­nite sta­tus, and then sign up as a spon­sor for the next. This is ille­gal chain migra­tion on steroids all made pos­si­ble by an agency will­ing to con­tort and ignore the law,” he said.

Pressed fur­ther by Ohio Rep. Jim Jor­dan, Jad­dou admit­ted that the pro­gram allows migrants to spon­sor oth­er migrants. She said 86% of CHNV parole spon­sors are U.S. cit­i­zens and law­ful res­i­dents, leav­ing ques­tions about the oth­er 14%.   

Ari­zona Rep. Andy Big­gs dug fur­ther, ques­tion­ing Jad­dou on the wide­spread abus­es of the CHNV pro­gram by migrants, cit­ing hun­dreds and thou­sands of instances of the same Social Secu­ri­ty num­ber, email, zip code and respons­es being used on mul­ti­ple spon­sor appli­ca­tions.

“This pro­gram is rife with fraud,” Big­gs said, adding that “the fraud was so ram­pant you closed down the pro­gram, but you didn’t fix it. It’s still ongo­ing.”

“Do you know how you reduce ille­gal immi­gra­tion, accord­ing to the left? It’s real­ly sim­ple. You make ille­gal immi­gra­tion legal,” said Texas Rep. Wes­ley Hunt. 

“Biden was upset the Amer­i­can peo­ple were com­plain­ing about the increase in ille­gal immi­gra­tion num­bers at the bor­der,” he said. “So, what did Biden do? He legal­ized ille­gal immi­gra­tion by expand­ing the intend­ed use of parole to fit his needs.”

Through­out the hear­ing, Jad­dou main­tained that her agency was effec­tive­ly man­ag­ing its duties, includ­ing the CHNV pro­gram, which she said is “just one piece” of “an entire bor­der man­age­ment strat­e­gy.” 

“It can­not work alone,” she said. “Nei­ther can enforce­ment mea­sures work alone if we want it to be long-last­ing, and that’s why this process is impor­tant.”