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Bill

Bill

HR 2454

No Citizenship for Alien Invaders Act of 2025

119th Congress Introduced by Josh Brecheen and 3 co-sponsors

Proposes restricting or altering U.S. citizenship eligibility for certain noncitizens labeled as "alien invaders" in order to change naturalization pathways.

Introduced in House
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HR 2454

Summary: No Citizenship for Alien Invaders Act of 2025 (HR 2454)

Overview
- Title: No Citizenship for Alien Invaders Act of 2025
- Bill number: HR 2454
- Purpose (based on title): The bill appears to propose changes to eligibility for U.S. citizenship for certain noncitizens described in the measure as "alien invaders." The exact definitions, scope, and mechanisms would be set forth in the bill’s text.
- Status: Introduced in the House of Representatives
- Introduced date: March 27, 2025
- Current action: Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary

Sponsors
- Primary sponsor: Cory Mills
- Cosponsors: Anna Paulina Luna, Josh Brecheen, Andy Harris

Key Provisions (Not Available in the provided information)
- The actual legislative text is not included in the materials provided. When available, it would specify:
- Definitions: who qualifies as “alien invaders” or the equivalent term used in the bill.
- Eligibility changes: how naturalization or citizenship pathways would be altered (e.g., eligibility criteria, application requirements, or denial grounds).
- Implementation: effective dates, transition rules, and any grandfathering provisions.
- Enforcement and penalties: how compliance would be monitored and consequences for violations or noncompliance.
- Relationship to existing immigration and naturalization laws: amendments to current statutes and any cross-references.

Potential Impact (high-level, based on the bill’s title)
- Affected individuals: noncitizens seeking or currently pursuing U.S. citizenship; potential changes to those previously on a naturalization track.
- Government agencies: likely impacts on agencies administering naturalization (e.g., U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services) and related enforcement or compliance mechanisms.
- Legal and policy considerations: could prompt legal and constitutional questions depending on the scope and definitions; potential litigation or challenges if the provisions intersect with established immigration law and rights.
- Administrative and political dynamics: introduced in the House with a cohort of cosponsors; subject to committee action (Judiciary Committee) and possible subsequent floor consideration, with outcomes uncertain.

Procedural and Timeline Notes
- Referenced to the House Committee on the Judiciary on March 27, 2025.
- As introduced, there is no indication of amendments, markup, or floor passage dates. The legislative path would depend on committee action, potential amendments, and broader congressional priorities.

What to look for next
- The full text to understand defined terms, specific eligibility changes, and the bill’s operative provisions.
- Any committee reports, amendments, and floor debates that clarify intent and practical effects.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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