HR-8605-119
Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Sponsored by J. Correa (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would prohibit the federal government from detaining or removing Vietnamese nationals who entered the United States on or before July 12, 1995, and have continuously resided here since, even if they are subject to a final order of removal. Exceptions apply if the Secretary of Homeland Security determines the individual poses a credible threat to national security, or if the individual is subject to extradition. The bill would also require DHS to provide work authorization to protected individuals and to notify each affected person within 60 days of enactment, including instructions for filing a motion to reopen their removal proceedings.
Who benefits
Vietnamese nationals who arrived in the U.S. on or before July 12, 1995 (the date the U.S. and Vietnam normalized diplomatic relations) and have lived here continuously since, who currently hold final orders of removal. This population includes many refugees and their families who fled Vietnam after the fall of Saigon in 1975. Employers of these individuals, who would gain legal certainty about their workforce. Immigration attorneys who would see increased demand for motions to reopen. Communities — particularly in California, Texas, and other states with large Vietnamese American populations — where these long-term residents live and work.
Who is hurt
Federal immigration enforcement agencies (DHS/ICE), which would lose authority to remove a specific class of individuals with final removal orders. Individuals or communities who believe enforcement of existing removal orders serves public safety or rule-of-law interests. Taxpayers who may bear administrative costs of the notification program and work authorization processing. Other immigrant groups with final removal orders who arrived under comparable historical circumstances but are not covered by this bill, who may face comparatively unequal treatment.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the individuals protected by this bill arrived before the U.S. and Vietnam established diplomatic relations on July 12, 1995, meaning many could not be repatriated for decades through no fault of their own — a situation the U.S. government effectively created. They contend that these individuals, many of whom are elderly refugees who fled communist persecution, have built lives, families, and careers in the U.S. over 30+ years, and that deporting them now would sever deep community ties while offering little public safety benefit for those with no criminal history.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that this bill creates a categorical legislative override of final judicial removal orders, undermining the rule of law and the integrity of immigration court proceedings. They contend that Congress should not selectively shield one nationality from enforcement while others with similar circumstances remain subject to removal, and that the national security exception — limited to those "directly responsible" for harm — sets a high bar that may leave dangerous individuals protected. They further argue that the bill rewards prolonged unlawful presence and could incentivize similar non-compliance by other groups.