A proposed amendment to the fiscal 2027 National Defense Authorization Act would require the Department of Veterans Affairs to create a grant program for immigration legal services for noncitizen veterans facing deportation.
The measure, called the Honor Their Service Act and introduced by Rep. Norma Torres, D-Calif., would authorize $20 million over four years if it is included in the final defense bill and enacted.
The grants would fund legal services for noncitizen veterans who are in removal proceedings, at risk of removal, or already deported. Under the amendment, funding would go only to qualified public or nonprofit entities. The VA secretary, currently Doug Collins, would be required to consult veterans service organizations and legal providers with relevant experience, and the department would have to submit biennial reports to Congress.
“For generations, noncitizens have answered the call to serve in the United States Armed Forces, risking their lives in defense of our country,” Torres said in a statement. “No veteran who wore the uniform of this nation should be left to navigate our broken immigration system alone or face deportation without access to legal representation.”
The proposal followed earlier unsuccessful efforts to advance similar legislation. In April, Torres introduced a similar amendment to the fiscal 2027 Military Construction, Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies appropriations bill that would have barred federal funds from being used to deport a veteran unless the veteran first received legal counsel and due process in immigration court.
During committee markup, Republicans changed that proposal and adopted different bill language by a 34-28 voice vote.
The number of noncitizen U.S. military veterans who have been deported or faced possible deportation remains unclear because data from the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement does not provide a full count.