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Randy Feenstra on Immigration

 

 


Supports immigration reform; opposes family separation

In their first televised debate, the candidates for Iowa's 4th Congressional District offered divergent views on immigration policy. Advocates have been unable to locate parents of 545 migrant children who were separated from their families under President Trump's "zero tolerance" crackdown of illegal immigration.

When asked about the separations, [Feenstra's opponent J.D.] Scholten said the U.S. needs to end policies that take children from their parents at the border. He said he supports immigration reform, including granting citizenship to DREAMers.

Feenstra said he wants children to be reunited with their parents, but the national priority should be border protection. He wants to expand the H-1B visa, which allows companies to temporarily employ immigrants to work in the US. However, he said current undocumented immigrants in the U.S. need to leave and then reapply to come back to the country. "We are a rule of law," Feenstra said. "We have to stand by the rules on the books."

Source: Iowa Capital Dispatch "Immigration" on 2020 IA-4 House , Oct 21, 2020

Fight sanctuary cities and build the wall

Randy agrees with President Trump that we must secure our southern border. In the State Senate, Randy supported the law that banned sanctuary cities in Iowa and in Congress, Randy will support building the wall while opposing Nancy Pelosi's and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's reckless open borders policies that are endangering Iowa communities.
Source: 2020 IA-4 House campaign website FeenstraForCongress.com , Aug 25, 2020

Pro-border wall, according to PVS survey.

Feenstra supports the PVS survey question on the border wall

Project Vote Smart inferred whether candidates agree or disagree with the statement, 'Immigration: Do you support the construction of a wall along the Mexican border?' PVS self-description: "The Political Courage Test provides voters with positions on key issues. Historically, candidates have failed to complete our test due to the advice they receive from their advisors and out of fear of negative attack ads."

Source: PVS Survey 20PVS-12A on Sep 9, 2020

Allow immigration bans from non-cooperating countries.

Feenstra voted NAY 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: Congressional vote 21-HR1333 on Feb 25, 2021

Other governors on Immigration: Randy Feenstra on other issues:
IA Gubernatorial:
Deidre DeJear
Ras Smith
IA Senatorial:
Abby Finkenauer
Bob Krause
Chuck Grassley
Eddie Mauro
Joni Ernst
Kimberly Graham
Michael Franken
Theresa Greenfield

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Page last updated: Feb 07, 2026; copyright 1999-2022 Jesse Gordon and OnTheIssues.org