Republicans clash over Dignidad Act immigration proposal

Florida Republican Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar is promoting her Dignidad Act amid growing backlash from within her party. The bill, introduced in July 2025, would grant legal status to certain long-term undocumented immigrants and protect Dreamers, sparking debate on social media and in recent interviews. Critics call it amnesty, while Salazar insists it removes criminals and secures the border.

Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar (R-FL) and co-sponsor Rep. Mike Lawler (R-NY) have faced sharp criticism for the Dignidad Act, which offers renewable seven-year legal status to undocumented immigrants present before 2021 who are working or studying, along with protections for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals recipients. The legislation, co-sponsored by 39 Republicans and Democrats, also codifies border security measures and requires a $1,000 annual payment deposited into an H-1B account, according to bill details cited in discussions. Salazar launched a Dignity Tour last month to build support, posting on X that the act removes criminal illegal aliens and recent arrivals while addressing economic impacts of mass deportations of long-term contributors with American children and community ties. She stated, “most Americans do NOT support deporting every long-term immigrant who has spent years working here. ” Rep. Brandon Gill countered on X that it is “rank amnesty,” prioritizing dignity for Americans through mass deportations as campaigned. In an April 8 Fox News interview, Laura Ingraham pressed Lawler on fraud risks and crime waivers, noting the bill allows Department of Homeland Security discretion in background checks without strict proof requirements. Salazar, in a Dennis Michael Lynch podcast the same day, dismissed vetting concerns for millions as administrative. A resurfaced July 2025 clip shows Salazar saying the bill buys peace for immigrants, with future laws potentially offering citizenship paths. The debate has gone viral on X, highlighting tensions in swing districts with high immigrant populations as midterms near.

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