Guaranteeing the States Protection Against Invasion Act of 2026
Summary
What This Bill Does
The Guaranteeing the States Protection Against Invasion Act of 2026 adds new Immigration and Nationality Act authorities tied to a presidential proclamation that an invasion exists at the United States-Mexico land border for Article IV, section 4 purposes. The President may issue or terminate the proclamation and must notify Congress within seven days. During a proclaimed invasion, the President must suspend entry, including physical entry, by any alien who unlawfully enters or attempts to enter across the southern border. New section 208A makes those entrants ineligible for asylum, withholding, parole, or other DHS-specified relief that would let them remain, and strips court jurisdiction over determinations or claims under the section except claims of U.S. nationality. Section 5 makes an alien inadmissible if, during the proclamation period, the alien fails before entry to provide information sufficient for health, criminal, and security determinations under INA 212(a)(1), (2), and (3); such aliens are subject to immediate removal, repatriation, or transfer. Section 6 directs DHS, with State and DOJ, to repel the invasion, detain, expel, or remove involved aliens, prevent further entry, and use federal personnel and assets as directed by the President. The authorities cease when the President proclaims the invasion has ended.
Who Benefits and How
Border-state officials, DHS border operations, immigration enforcement officers, state governments seeking stronger federal action, and members of Congress favoring emergency border controls benefit from a statutory proclamation framework, mandatory suspension of unlawful southern-border entry, reduced immigration relief availability, and immediate removal authority. Federal agencies benefit from clearer authority to coordinate personnel and assets during a proclaimed invasion.
Who Bears the Burden and How
Unauthorized southern-border entrants, asylum seekers crossing between ports, parole applicants, immigration attorneys, humanitarian service providers, and federal courts bear major burdens because the bill cuts off relief, limits judicial review, and allows immediate removal, repatriation, transfer, detention, or expulsion during a proclamation period. DHS, State, DOJ, border agents, detention managers, and public-health or security screeners must implement proclamation notices, information checks, removals, and interagency operations.
Key Provisions
- Authorizes the President to proclaim an invasion at the United States-Mexico land border and notify Congress within seven days.
- Requires suspension of entry for aliens who unlawfully enter or attempt to enter across the southern border during the proclamation.
- Bars asylum, withholding, parole, and other relief that would permit covered entrants to remain in the United States.
- Limits court jurisdiction over covered relief determinations except for U.S. nationality claims.
- Makes failure to provide health, criminal, and security information before entry a ground of inadmissibility during the proclamation.
- Requires DHS, with State and DOJ coordination, to repel, detain, expel, remove, and prevent further entry by covered aliens.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Authorizes the President to proclaim an invasion at the southern border, requires suspension of entry for unlawful southern-border entrants during the proclamation, bars immigration relief for those entrants, makes insufficient health or security information a ground of inadmissibility, authorizes detention, removal, repatriation, transfer, and federal personnel use, and terminates the authorities when the proclamation ends.
Key Policy Areas
Immigration, Law Enforcement, Government
Primary Purpose
Authorizes the President to proclaim an invasion at the southern border, requires suspension of entry for unlawful southern-border entrants during the proclamation, bars immigration relief for those entrants, makes insufficient health or security information a ground of inadmissibility, authorizes detention, removal, repatriation, transfer, and federal personnel use, and terminates the authorities when the proclamation ends.
Policy Domains
Substantive provisions
Identified Gains
- Border-state officials
- DHS border operations
- Immigration enforcement officers
- State governments seeking border action
- Congressional immigration hardliners
Identified Costs
- Unauthorized southern-border entrants
- Asylum seekers crossing southern border
- Parole applicants
- Immigration attorneys
- Humanitarian service providers
- Federal courts
- DHS removal officers
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
In CommitteeReferred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Introduced in House
Mr. Hunt introduced the following bill; which was referred to …
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Congressional immigration committees, Federal courts, President of the United States
Positive-direction: Congressional immigration committees, President of the United States
Negative-direction: Federal courts
Asylum seekers crossing southern border, Unauthorized southern-border entrants
DHS border operations, DHS removal officers
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology