
OAN Staff Brooke Mallory
5:00 PM – Wednesday, March 18, 2026
In a session marked by sharp partisan divisions, the U.S. House of Representatives narrowly passed H.R. 1958, the Deporting Fraudsters Act of 2026, on Wednesday.
The legislation, which aims to combat noncitizens committing welfare fraud, reportedly passed with a 231-186 vote, reflecting a unified Republican front against a wall of Democrat opposition. Every single “yea” vote came from the Republican caucus, while every “nay” vote came from the Democrat caucus.
The Deporting Fraudsters Act of 2026 specifically targets both illegal aliens and noncitizens by amending the Immigration and Nationality Act to clarify that defrauding the U.S. government or unlawfully receiving public benefits are grounds for both inadmissibility and deportation.
While much of the legislative rhetoric focuses on illegal aliens and those who have entered the country unlawfully, the legal text of the bill also applies more broadly to any “alien” — a federal legal term encompassing any person who is not a citizen or national of the United States.
This includes individuals who may be in the country on valid visas or with legal permanent resident status, such as green card holders, if they are convicted of, or admit to, specific fraud-related offenses. These offenses include fraud involving Social Security, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and other federal, state, or local public benefits.
Furthermore, the act makes such individuals ineligible for almost all forms of immigration relief, ensuring that those found to have exploited taxpayer-funded programs are subject to permanent removal — and barred from future re-entry.
The bill, introduced by Representative Dave Taylor (R-Ohio), seeks to close the slew of “dangerous loopholes” in the Immigration and Nationality Act. Republicans have described the vote as a common-sense measure to protect the integrity of the American safety net.
“If an illegal alien defrauds the United States or steals benefits from our nation’s most vulnerable, they should be permanently removed from our country,” said Rep. Taylor (R-Ohio) following the vote. “Ohioans work too hard to have their tax dollars stolen by people who shouldn’t be here in the first place.”
If signed into law, the act would:
Mandate deportation: Make any non-citizen convicted of, or admitting to, defrauding the U.S. government — specifically regarding public benefits like SNAP (food stamps), Medicaid, or Social Security — a deportable and inadmissible offense.
Eliminate relief: Strip eligibility for any form of immigration relief for individuals found to have committed benefit fraud.
Expand grounds for removal: Allow for the removal of individuals who admit to the “essential elements” of fraud, even without a formal criminal conviction in some cases.
Democrats, however, had argued that the bill is a “draconian” expansion of the Trump administration’s mass-deportation agenda. Left-wing opponents expressed concern that the legislation “lacks due process and targets vulnerable families.”
Some Democrat critics pointed to the provision allowing deportation based on “admitted acts” rather than court convictions, warning that it could lead to coerced confessions or administrative errors. Additionally, Democrat lawmakers argued that the bill could “scare” legal residents and mixed-status families away from seeking legitimate emergency aid for fear of being misidentified as “fraudsters.”
Opponents have also voiced that existing laws already prohibit non-citizens from accessing the majority of federal welfare programs and that fraud is already a punishable offense.
The bill’s passage comes amidst a high-stakes backdrop of a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) shutdown, which began in mid-February over disputes regarding immigration enforcement funding.
While the House victory is a major win for the Republican Party, the legislation faces a precarious future in the Senate, as Democrats hold enough sway to block the measure via the filibuster. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) has signaled that the bill will be “dead on arrival,” while Republican leaders have responded by discussing potential workarounds to force a vote.
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