Austin American-Statesman

Many here illegally overstayed their visas

GOP House majority leader’s statement on the right track.

- By Chris Nichols PolitiFact.com

The debate over illegal immigratio­n in America most often centers on the unlawful crossings at the U.S.-Mexico border.

President Donald Trump frequently stokes that debate as he did with this tweet in June: “We cannot allow all of these people to invade our Country.”

But Republican House Majority Leader

Kevin McCarthy recently claimed there’s another factor — visa overstays — that accounts for half of the people in the country illegally.

“Half of everyone that’s here illegally (in the U.S.) came here legally on a visa and have overstayed their visa,” said McCarthy, a Republican from Bakersfiel­d, Calif.

That’s not to say McCarthy, a close Trump ally, was breaking with the president’s hardline immigratio­n stance. He told the crowd he supports Trump’s border wall and opposes sanctuary cities.

PolitiFact and its affiliates have fact-checked statements similar to McCarthy’s on visa overstays in the past.

They’ve found those statements are generally correct. But they’ve also noted that the supporting evidence is now somewhat dated.

For this fact-check, we examined whether current available data support McCarthy’s claim.

Past fact-checks, including one by PolitiFact Virginia in 2016,

have relied on a 2006 Pew Research Center report. It estimated “nearly half of all the unauthoriz­ed migrants now living in the United States entered the country legally through a port of entry such as an airport or a border crossing point where they were subject to inspection by immigratio­n officials.”

Each year, the United States grants thousands of temporary visas for foreign students, tourists and workers. They can last from a few weeks to several years.

The Pew report put the share of visa overstayer­s at “as much as 45 percent of the total unauthoriz­ed migrant population.” The study, however, used data more than two decades old from the Immigratio­n and Naturaliza­tion Service, an agency that doesn’t exist anymore and whose functions were folded into the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

“The problem is that neither the INS nor its successor, the Department of Homeland Security, have provided updated statistics on the percentage of undocument­ed immigrants who overstayed visas since that aging study,” PolitiFact Virginia reported in 2016.

Sarah Pierce, a policy analyst at the Migration Policy Institute, told us that recent Homeland Security Department reports include data limited to foreign visitors who arrived by air and sea crossings, but not by land.

“They do not tell you anything about the full population of overstays,” she wrote.

She said a 2017 study by the Center for Migration Studies, a nonpartisa­n think tank, is more helpful.

That report estimated visa overstays in 2014 accounted for 42 percent of the total undocument­ed population, or about 4.5 million people. It also projected that overstays made up about twothirds of the total number of people who became unauthoriz­ed immigrants in the U.S. that year.

McCarthy’s claim of “half ” is not far from the 42 percent figure.

Asked to support the congressma­n’s statement, McCarthy’s spokesman pointed to a recent article by The Washington Post that cited the Center for Migration Studies report.

The center’s report said its figures “are based primarily on detailed estimates of the undocument­ed population in 2014 compiled by (the Center for Migration Studies) and estimates of overstays for 2015 derived by DHS.”

Given the past decade’s dramatic and well-documented decline in illegal southern border crossings, there’s a strong case that visa overstayer­s now account for a larger share of the overall total of unauthoriz­ed immigrants.

Alex Nowrasteh, an immigratio­n policy analyst at the libertaria­n Cato Institute, told PolitiFact Virginia in 2016 that while estimates of undocument­ed immigrants have been stable since 2007, the number of people entering illegally across the southweste­rn U.S. border has “collapsed.”

That means the proportion of those overstayin­g their visas likely is on the rise, he said in 2016.

We asked Nowrasteh whether that still holds true in 2018.

“Yes, about half of illegal immigrants currently are overstays,” he told us.

Our ruling:

McCarthy recently claimed that “Half of everyone that’s here illegally (in the U.S.) came here legally on a visa and have overstayed their visa.”

Past fact-checks found this statement and ones like it are generally correct. But they cautioned that the claims mainly rely on figures from a 2006 report, which used federal immigratio­n data from the mid-1990s.

More recent Homeland Security Department reports don’t offer the full picture of foreign visitors who arrived on visas.

A 2017 report by the Center for Migration Studies, however, gives a more current look at visa overstays. It shows McCarthy’s claim, while it should have been couched as an estimate rather than a statement of fact, is on the right track.

It projects overstayer­s were 42 percent, or nearly half, of the country’s undocument­ed population in 2014.

Finally, with the decline in illegal border crossings, it’s fair to estimate that visa overstayer­s now account for an increasing share of the country’s undocument­ed population.

We rate McCarthy’s statement Mostly True.

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