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Abigail Spanberger on Immigration

 

 


Poorly-trained ICE agents sow fear in our communities

Law enforcement officers across the country know that it's a unique responsibility to do the serious work of investigating crimes, comforting victims, and making arrests. It's about building trust, and that requires an abiding sense of duty and commitment to community. And yet, our President has sent poorly trained federal agents into our cities, where they have arrested and detained American citizens and people who aspire to be Americans--and they have done it without a warrant.

They have ripped mothers away from their babies, they have sent children to far-off detention centers, and they have killed American citizens on our streets. And they have done it all with their faces masked from accountability.

Every minute spent sowing fear is a minute not spent investigating crimes. Our President told us tonight that we are safer because of these agents. Our broken immigration system is something to be fixed--not an excuse for unaccountable agents to terrorize our communities.

Source: Democratic response to the 2026 State of the Union Address , Feb 24, 2026

Called out Trump for blocking bipartisan border bill

Spanberger is calling out Donald Trump for pressuring Republicans to kill the Emergency National Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, a bipartisan border agreement that failed in a 49-50 Senate vote. "The very principle that we would have someone seeking higher office who says, 'No, let this problem continue to be pervasive because I want to use it as a political tool.' That's the opposite of everything we should see in our political system," Spanberger told Dogwood.
Source: VA Dogwood on 2025 Virginia Gubernatorial race , Feb 9, 2024

Create an earned pathway to legal status for undocumented

Rep. Spanberger supports comprehensive immigration reform. Rep. Spanberger believes that a successful reform project must consider the needs of businesses and agricultural producers, create an earned pathway to legal status for tax-paying, law-abiding undocumented immigrants currently living in the United States, and give long overdue certainty to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) recipients.
Source: 2024 VA House campaign website spanberger.house.gov , Nov 28, 2023

No border wall; yes earned pathway to citizenship

Spanberger opposes Trumps' proposed border wall but says she wants strong border security. Spanberger says she wants bipartisan reform to create an earned pathway to legal status for undocumented immigrants as long as they abide by the law, work, and pay taxes.
Source: Richmond Times-Dispatch on 2018 Congress VA-7 election , Oct 27, 2018

Increase both high-skill and family-based visa caps.

Spanberger co-sponsored the Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act

Legislative Summary:This bill increases the per-country cap on family-based immigrant visas from 7% of the total number of such visas available that year to 15%, and eliminates the 7% cap for employment-based immigrant visas. It also removes an offset that reduced the number of visas for individuals from China. The bill also establishes transition rules for employment-based visas from FY2020-FY2022, by reserving a percentage of EB-2 (workers with advanced degrees or exceptional ability), EB-3 (skilled and other workers), and EB-5 (investors) visas for individuals not from the two countries with the largest number of recipients of such visas. Of the unreserved visas, not more than 85% shall be allotted to immigrants from any single country.

Explanation from the Countable.US: Under the current immigration system, immigrants from any one country can claim no more than 7% of the 140,000 employment-based green cards issued annually to foreign nationals working in the U.S. This significantly disadvantages immigrants from larger countries that more immigrants come from.

For example, China (population 1.3 billion) and India have large backlogs of workers wishing to immigrate to and work in the U.S., but they have the name visa caps as countries such as Iceland or Estonia (population 1.3 million), which have both much smaller populations and far fewer citizens seeking to immigrate to the U.S.

The net effect of this is that immigrants from India and China can face decades-long waits, averaging 2-3 times the wait times for immigrants from other countries, for green cards, and many have to return home because they can`t get permanent residency; meanwhile, countries such as Iceland and Estonia never come close to reaching their visa limit caps.

Legislative outcome Roll call 437 in House on 7/10/2019 passed 365-65-2; referred to Committee in Senate 7/9/2019; no action as of 1/1/2020.

Source: S.386/H.R.1044 19-HR1044 on Feb 7, 2019

Sponsored bill to disallow religion-based immigration ban.

Spanberger co-sponsored NO BAN Act

The National Origin-Based Antidiscrimination for Nonimmigrants Act (NO BAN Act) imposes limitations on the President`s authority to suspend or restrict aliens from entering the US. It also prohibits religious discrimination in various immigration-related decisions, such as issuing a visa. The President may temporarily restrict the entry of any class of aliens after determining that the restriction would address specific and credible facts that threaten U.S. interests such as security or public safety.

GovTrack.us analysis (4/21/21): President Donald Trump instituted a travel ban on eight countries: Chad, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Syria, Venezuela, and Yemen. The Supreme Court upheld the travel ban 5-4 in the 2018 decision Trump v. Hawaii. Trump`s travel ban was popularly nicknamed `the Muslim ban` by its Democratic critics since most of the countries it applied to were majority Muslim, and because Trump as a 2016 candidate had indeed proposed a Muslim ban. Regardless, President Joe Biden rescinded the policy on his first day in office. Currently, federal law bans any person from being discriminated against when entering the U.S. on the basis of five characteristics: race, sex, nationality, place of birth, or place of residence. The NO BAN Act would add another category: religion.

Rep. Tom McClintock in OPPOSITION: President Trump invoked this authority against countries that were hotbeds of international terrorism and that were not cooperating with the US in providing basic information about travelers coming from these countries. The left called it a `Muslim ban.` What nonsense. Without this authority, the president would have been powerless to take simple, prudent precautions against terrorists and criminals from entering the US.

Legislative Outcome: Passed House 218-208-3 on April 21, 2021, rollcall #127; introduced in Senate with 42 co-sponsors but no further Senate action during 2021.

Source: H.R.1333/S.1891 21-HR1333 on Feb 25, 2021

Other governors on Immigration: Abigail Spanberger on other issues:
VA Gubernatorial:
Amanda Chase
Glenn Youngkin
Jennifer Carroll Foy
Jennifer McClellan
Justin Fairfax
Kirk Cox
Lee Carter
Mark Herring
Pete Snyder
Ralph Northam
Terry McAuliffe
Winsome Earle-Sears
VA Senatorial:
David Williams
Hung Cao
Mark Warner
Nick Freitas
Scott Parkinson
Tim Kaine

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Page last updated: Apr 02, 2026; copyright 1999-2022 Jesse Gordon and OnTheIssues.org