Federation for American Immigration Reform
The Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) is a group with one mission: to severely limit immigration into the United States. Although FAIR maintains a veneer of legitimacy that has allowed its principals to testify in Congress and lobby the federal government, this veneer hides much ugliness.
FAIR leaders have ties to white supremacist groups and eugenicists and have made many racist statements. Its advertisements have been rejected because of racist content. FAIR鈥檚 founder, the late John Tanton, has expressed his wish that America remain a majority-white population: a goal to be achieved, presumably, by limiting the number of nonwhites who enter the country. One of the group鈥檚 main goals is upending the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, which ended a decades-long, racist quota system that limited immigration mostly to northern Europeans. FAIR President Dan Stein has called the Act a 鈥渕istake.鈥
In their own words
鈥淚mmigrants don鈥檛 come all church-loving, freedom-loving, God-fearing 鈥 Many of them hate America, hate everything that the United States stands for. Talk to some of these Central Americans.鈥 鈥 FAIR President Dan Stein, interviewed by Tucker Carlson, Oct. 2, 1997
鈥淒o we leave it to individuals to decide that they are the intelligent ones who should have more kids? And more troublesome, what about the less intelligent, who logically should have less? Who is going to break the bad news [to less intelligent individuals], and how will it be implemented?鈥 鈥 John Tanton, letter to eugenicist Robert K. Graham (now deceased), Sept. 18, 1996
鈥淚 blame ninety-eight percent of responsibility for this country鈥檚 immigration crisis on Ted Kennedy and his political allies, who decided some time back in 1958, earlier perhaps, that immigration was a great way to retaliate against Anglo-Saxon dominance and hubris, and the immigration laws from the 1920s were just this symbol of that, and it鈥檚 a form of revengism, or revenge, that these forces continue to push the immigration policy that they know full well are [sic] creating chaos and will continue to create chaos down the line.鈥 鈥 FAIR President Dan Stein, "Oral History of the Federation for American Immigration Reform," interview of Dan Stein by John Tanton, August 1994
鈥淚鈥檝e come to the point of view that for European-American society and culture to persist requires a European-American majority, and a clear one at that.鈥 鈥 John Tanton, letter to eugenicist and ecology professor Garrett Hardin (now deceased), Dec. 10, 1993
鈥淎s Whites see their power and control over their lives declining, will they simply go quietly into the night? Or will there be an explosion?鈥 鈥 FAIR founder and board member John Tanton, Oct. 10, 1986
Background
Tanton founded the Federation for American Immigration Reform on Jan. 2, 1979, in Washington D.C. Roger Conner, an environmental lawyer, was appointed executive director, while Tanton served as the chairman of the board of directors. Before establishing FAIR, Tanton had experience working with groups concerned about how population growth affected the environment. Tanton served in several Sierra Club leadership posts, and he had been the president of Zero Population Growth, a group founded by biologist and longtime FAIR adviser Paul Ehrlich, from 1975 to 1977.
The founding of FAIR was a major change for Tanton. But he was driven to shift his efforts to the battle against immigration by his increasing concern that it was the primary cause of population growth. As a result, FAIR focuses exclusively on immigration issues. Its goal, according to its website, is to set immigration quotas 鈥渁t the lowest feasible levels鈥 and to prevent all illegal immigration. The group attempts to appear moderate, even though its record is extreme, particularly on racial issues. This strategy has paid off: In August 2009, FAIR President Dan Stein boasted that FAIR leaders had testified before Congress about 100 times.
In its early years, FAIR was known for frequent op-ed pieces and controversial advertisements. In December 1980, it ran an ad in the Rocky Mountain News with the headline: 鈥淥ur Grandparents Came To America To Escape Poverty And Despair. Will Our Children Want To Leave For The Same Reasons?鈥 The implication was that unless immigration policies were reformed, immigrants would swarm the United States, undermine job prospects for Americans and put an end to American prosperity.
In 1988, Dan Stein replaced Roger Conner as executive director. Stein had been an employee of FAIR since 1982; before that, he was the executive director of the Immigration Reform Law Institute (IRLI), which was incorporated under FAIR鈥檚 tax exemption and still serves as FAIR鈥檚 legal arm. Conner became FAIR鈥檚 president; this meant that Stein took over the responsibilities of running FAIR while Conner focused on fundraising.
On Oct. 9, 1988, the Arizona Republic published excerpts from embarrassing memos that had been sent by Tanton and Conner to members of FAIR鈥檚 leadership. The documents were known as the WITAN memos; they came from an October 1986 conference in which Tanton met with a number of anti-immigration activists for a strategy session. The memos revealed Tanton鈥檚 innermost, and controversial, thoughts. Tanton warned of a 鈥Latin onslaught,鈥 complained of Latinos鈥 allegedly low 鈥渆ducability.鈥 He asked, 鈥淲ill Latin American migrants bring with them the tradition of the mordida (bribe), the lack of involvement in public affairs, etc.?鈥 He also wondered: 鈥淐an homo contraceptivus [meaning whites] compete with homo progenitiva [meaning Latinos] if borders aren鈥檛 controlled? Or is advice to limit ones [sic] family simply advice to move over and let someone else with greater reproductive powers occupy the space?鈥
In the memos, Tanton, sounding much like the Klan of the 1920s, expressed concerns over the role of the Catholic Church in the United States. He worried that the church would capitalize on the Catholic faith of Latino immigrants to exert more political influence in the U.S. Specifically, he thought the church would try to subvert the division between church and state and limit abortion and birth control.
Linda Chavez, then the executive director of another group founded by John Tanton and of which he was then president, U.S. English, resigned because of the memos, calling them 鈥渞epugnant and not excusable鈥 and 鈥渁nti-Catholic and anti-Hispanic.鈥 Several members of U.S. English鈥檚 board, including Walter Cronkite and Arnold Schwarzenegger, also quit the group, and Tanton resigned. But there was no fallout for Tanton with his colleagues at FAIR. There, Tanton was supported and a committee created to craft his defense for the incendiary comments in the WITAN memos.
The memos were far from the sum of Tanton鈥檚 extremism. As reports by the Southern Poverty Law Center (人兽性交) would document, Tanton had a lengthy record of friendly correspondence with Holocaust deniers, a former Klan lawyer and leading white nationalist thinkers, including Jared Taylor (who wrote in 2005, 鈥淲hen blacks are left entirely to their own devices, Western civilization 鈥 any kind of civilization 鈥 disappears鈥). On another occasion, Tanton wrote a major FAIR funder to suggest she read the work of radical antisemitic professor Kevin MacDonald 鈥 to 鈥済ive you a new understanding of the Jewish outlook on life鈥 鈥 and suggested that the entire FAIR board discuss the man鈥檚 theories about the Jews. In a letter to FAIR board member Donald Collins, Tanton enthused over the work of John Trevor Sr. 鈥 a key architect of the bluntly racist Immigration Act of 1924 and a man who distributed pro-Nazi propaganda and warned shrilly of 鈥渄iabolical Jewish control鈥 of America 鈥 and said it should serve FAIR as 鈥渁 guidepost to what we must follow again this time.鈥
The WITAN memos revealed Tanton鈥檚 keen awareness of the importance of seeming respectable. In one memo, he wrote: 鈥渢he issues we鈥檙e touching on here must be broached by liberals. The conservatives simply cannot do it without tainting the whole subject.鈥 But the publication of the memos did not halt FAIR鈥檚 growth. In 1990, FAIR claimed 50,000 members.
Tanton鈥檚 preoccupation with immigration appeared to be based, at least in part, on race. In a March 3, 1993, memo to FAIR board member Otis Graham, he demonstrated his desire to limit the number of nonwhites living in the U.S. The memo concerned a new group Tanton wanted to start, which he would have named the League for European American Defense, Education, and Research, or LEADERs [sic]. According to another Tanton memo, he had hatched the idea with help from three prominent white nationalists: the Council of Conservative Citizens鈥 Sam Francis, American Renaissance鈥檚 Jared Taylor and Wayne Lutton, who edits Tanton鈥檚 hate journal The Social Contract. Tanton wrote in his LEADERs memo: 鈥淧rojections by the U.S. Census Bureau show that midway into the next century, the current European-American majority will become a minority. 鈥 This is unacceptable; we decline to bequeath to our children minority status in their own land.鈥 Here, Tanton made it quite clear that the skin color of immigrants factored into his desire to limit immigration.
Despite Tanton鈥檚 unsavory track record, longtime FAIR President Dan Stein has shrunk from any criticism of FAIR鈥檚 founder; on the contrary, in 2009 he told The Washington Post that Tanton was a 鈥淩enaissance man.鈥
Maybe Stein has vigorously defended Tanton because he has expressed similarly extreme positions. In 1991, Stein sent a report to FAIR鈥檚 board of directors under the subject line: 鈥.鈥 In the memo, which is archived at George Washington University鈥檚 Gelman Library, Stein celebrated a new 鈥渄isdain鈥 in the media and among intellectuals for 鈥渢he political agenda of those who openly attack the contributions of Western Civilization.鈥 He was particularly happy that 鈥渕ulticultural and Politically Correct鈥 school curricula had come under criticism.
Stein鈥檚 report expressed the hope that mounting criticism of multiculturalism would eventually lead to attacks on the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, which ended years of racist immigration policy (under a national origins quota system heavily skewed against non-whites and even darker-skinned Europeans) and initiated a wave of non-white immigration to the U.S. For Stein, the 1965 Act was 鈥渁 key mistake in national policy鈥 and a 鈥渟ource of error.鈥
In 1994, Tanton interviewed Stein for FAIR鈥檚 oral history project, which is composed of transcribed audio interviews with about a dozen FAIR principals. In that interview, Stein again expressed his disgust for the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act. He told Tanton that those who supported the 1965 reform wanted to 鈥渞etaliate against Anglo-Saxon dominance鈥 and that this 鈥渞evengism鈥 against whites had created a policy that is causing 鈥渃haos and will continue to create chaos.鈥
FAIR and the Pioneer Fund
Between 1985 and 1994, FAIR received around $1.2 million in grants from the Pioneer Fund. The Pioneer Fund is a eugenicist organization started in 1937 by men close to the Nazi regime who wanted to pursue 鈥渞ace betterment鈥 by promoting the genetic lines of American whites. Once led by the late race scientist J. Philippe Rushton, the fund continues to back studies intended to reveal the inferiority of minorities to whites.
FAIR stopped receiving Pioneer Fund grants in 1994 due to bad publicity it received when the grants were made public. At the time, FAIR was backing California鈥檚 punishing anti-immigrant Proposition 187, which would have denied education and health care to the children of undocumented immigrants in that state if it had not died as the result of court challenges. Stein and Tanton had led FAIR鈥檚 efforts to win funding from Pioneer, and Stein said in 1993, before Pioneer鈥檚 extremism was made public, that his 鈥渏ob [was] to get every dime of Pioneer鈥檚 money.鈥
After the bad publicity, FAIR denied that the Pioneer Fund money had any influence on its work or in any way influenced its programs. To manage the fallout, on March 16, 1994, Stein wrote a letter to Harry Weyher, then the president of the Pioneer Fund. Stein attached a draft of a document that he wanted Weyher to endorse and send out, titled 鈥淲hy the Pioneer Fund Supports the Immigration Reform Movement.鈥 Stein wrote the piece as though Weyher had written it himself. One part read, 鈥淲e are pleased and proud that through financial support, we鈥檝e made FAIR鈥檚 important work possible.鈥 Though FAIR stopped receiving grants from the fund, which require public disclosure, it continued to receive private financial support from Pioneer鈥檚 leaders for several years. In early 1997, Tanton organized a gathering at the New York Racquet and Tennis Club, where three members of FAIR鈥檚 board 鈥 Henry Buhl, Sharon Barnes and Alan Weeden 鈥 met with Harry Weyher. In the late 1990s, Tanton also vacationed with Pioneer Fund board member John Trevor Jr., who also provided private financial support to FAIR.
FAIR鈥檚 foray into TV
FAIR also has produced controversial media programming. In 1996, FAIR started a television program called 鈥淏orderline.鈥 The show lasted for about a year and featured a number of prominent white nationalists, including Sam Francis and Jared Taylor. 鈥淏orderline鈥 often advanced ideas popular in white nationalist circles; particularly popular was the idea that immigrants are destroying American culture or displacing Western civilization with degenerate, Third World ways.
Lawrence Auster, a white nationalist who spoke in 1996 to a conference put on by American Renaissance and whose website 鈥淎 View from the Right鈥 is listed as a hate site by the 人兽性交, appeared on the show on April 1, 1996, making the argument that if the U.S. loses its white majority, it will be destroyed. The topic that day, according to host Dan Stein, was to 鈥渢ake a politically incorrect look at American culture and Western Civilization.鈥 Stein added, 鈥淎merica, love it or lose it.鈥 Auster argued that because of an 鈥渋nvasion,鈥 鈥淎merica is in the process of dissolving as a nation.鈥 Supposedly drawing on history, Auster warned that as demographic change occurs and 鈥渢he majority is threatened in its position,鈥 the result could be 鈥渃ivil war.鈥 Auster鈥檚 particular concern that day was the loss of 鈥渢he historic European Anglo American culture.鈥 Stein certainly seemed to agree with his guest鈥檚 worries. 鈥淗ow can we preserve America if it becomes 50% Latin American?鈥 he asked. Stein also said that Anglos were leaving Los Angeles because it had become 鈥渁 foreign country to them.鈥
Another prominent white nationalist who appeared on 鈥淏orderline鈥 was naturalized English immigrant Peter Brimelow, who in 1999 would go on to found the anti-immigrant hate site VDARE.com. Brimelow authored Alien Nation, a book that argues America should remain white-dominated. In a discussion about Alien Nation on Aug. 5, 1996, Stein asked Brimelow whether 鈥淎merica鈥檚 social and economic elites seem to be writing off the whole idea of the nation-state.鈥 He added: 鈥淚f they shift their loyalty from the nation-state, what are they loyal to?鈥 Brimelow argued that these same elites are creating the 鈥済reatest transformation of any independent state in history鈥 by bringing in 鈥渘ew minority groups that did not exist before.鈥 Brimelow considered these elites to be 鈥渢reasonous,鈥 people who 鈥渉ate our traditional culture and they see immigration as a weapon to help destroy it.鈥 鈥淎re they really patriots?鈥 Brimelow asked.
Stein asked Brimelow to talk more about his statement 鈥渞ace is destiny in American politics.鈥 Brimelow did, saying, 鈥測ou really alter the texture of the country by bringing in different ethnic groups.鈥 Endorsing the invasion theory, Brimelow told one caller, 鈥測ou have areas of South Texas and so on that have essentially gone back to Mexico.鈥 Stein later asked Brimelow whether this all meant 鈥渢he end of the United States?鈥 Brimelow鈥檚 answer: 鈥淪ure.鈥
In 1998, various nativists and nativist groups attempted to get the Sierra Club to take an anti-immigration stance. The effort culminated in a 1998 vote in which Sierra Club members determined whether the group would support immigration restrictions. FAIR was one of the groups that helped to put the measure on the Sierra Club ballot, and Dan Stein teamed up with then CNN Crossfire host Pat Buchanan to advocate for it. Members ultimately chose to retain the Sierra Club鈥檚 neutral stance on immigration policy in a 60-40% vote. The Sierra Club was an important target for FAIR because it was considered a liberal group, and Tanton, who held leadership positions there in the 1970s and still had many allies, expressed in his WITAN memos that he thought that the Sierra Club would be less vulnerable to charges of racism when advocating against immigration.
In April 1999, FAIR attacked then-U.S. Sen. Spencer Abraham, R-Mich., for supporting more visas for foreigners with technology skills. It ran a newspaper ad that placed a picture of Abraham, an Arab American, alongside a picture of Osama bin Laden. It asked, 鈥淲hy Is a U.S. Senator Trying to Make It Easier for Osama bin Laden to Export Terrorism to the U.S.?鈥 FAIR鈥檚 ads were widely condemned and caused former Senator Alan K. Simpson, R-Wyo., to resign from FAIR鈥檚 advisory board. FAIR has also run other extremely controversial political advertisements, including one in 2000 in Iowa that was rejected by a TV station as 鈥渂orderline racist.鈥
FAIR officials and links to white supremacy
Several FAIR officials have links to white supremacist hate groups. Rick Oltman, who for much of the 1990s was FAIR鈥檚 western regional coordinator, spoke as part of a 1997 immigration panel sponsored by the Council of Conservative Citizens, a racist group that has described black people as a 鈥渞etrograde species of humanity.鈥 Council publications at the time listed Oltman as a member. Jim Staudenraus, FAIR鈥檚 eastern regional coordinator, participated in an anti-immigration conference in 2002 with white nationalist Jared Taylor. In 2007, a senior FAIR official met with leaders of Vlaams Belang, a Belgian political party that officials in that country outlawed in a previous incarnation (Vlaams Blok) as a 鈥渃riminal organization鈥 because of its racist, anti-immigrant views.
In late 2006, FAIR hired Joseph Turner as its western field representative after Oltman departed. Turner was the founder of the Southern California group Save Our State, a now-defunct anti-immigrant hate group that was known for attracting neo-Nazis to its rallies. Turner was on record before joining FAIR as saying that being a white separatist did not imply a person was racist. Turner once accused Mexican immigrants of turning California into a 鈥渢hird world cesspool.鈥 He left FAIR in December 2007 shortly after the 人兽性交, in tandem with publishing an extensive report on the group鈥檚 racism that included Turner鈥檚 inflammatory comments, designated FAIR as a hate group. FAIR representatives did not comment as to the reason for Turner鈥檚 departure.
FAIR board members harbor extreme views and connections as well. Garrett Hardin, a now-deceased biologist, was a very close friend of Tanton鈥檚 and an active board member of FAIR from the mid-1980s until around 1996. Like Tanton, he often expressed eugenicist views. Hardin was a longtime supporter of population control: In 1968, he wrote 鈥淭he Tragedy of the Commons,鈥 in which he argued that 鈥淸the] freedom to breed is intolerable.鈥 In a 1992 interview with Omni magazine, he argued against sending food to starving Ethiopians, noting that doing so would only 鈥渆ncourage population growth.鈥 In that interview, he lauded China for its 鈥渙ne-child policy鈥 but lamented that the policy was not thorough enough. Former Colorado Gov. Richard Lamm, a longtime member of FAIR鈥檚 board of advisors, once said that 鈥渘ew cultures鈥 in America were 鈥渄iluting what we are and who we are.鈥
Longtime FAIR board member Donald A. Collins has written frequently for VDARE.com, an anti-immigrant hate site named after Virginia Dare, said to have been the first English child born in the New World. (VDARE is dedicated to bashing immigrants and has published the work of many white nationalists and antisemites.) Collins has been published in The Journal of Social, Political and Economic Studies, a journal run by eugenicist Roger Pearson. Collins鈥 articles have focused on attacking the Catholic Church for its liberal stance on immigration. One accused then Los Angeles Archbishop Roger Mahony of selling out his country 鈥渋n exchange for more temporal power and glory.鈥 Another claimed bishops were 鈥渋nfiltrating and manipulating the American political process鈥 to dismantle the separation of church and state 鈥 the classic calumny directed at American Catholics for decades by the Klan and others. Another person linked to VDARE is Joe Guzzardi, a member of FAIR鈥檚 board of advisors who worked as an editor of the site.
On Oct. 2, 2007, Julie Kirchner became FAIR鈥檚 third executive director. Dan Stein had taken the position of FAIR president by that time. Stein retained his status as leader and public face of FAIR, while Kirchner managed the day-to-day operations.
FAIR pushes anti-immigrant legislation at state and local level
In the late 2000s, FAIR became much more active in pushing anti-immigrant laws at the state and local level. Attorney Kris Kobach of FAIR鈥檚 legal arm, the Immigration Reform Law Institute, helped write Arizona Senate Bill 1070. The bill, signed by Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer on April 23, 2010, forces police officers to detain individuals they suspect to be illegal immigrants and makes it a misdemeanor under state law for non-citizen immigrants to fail to carry their immigration papers. The law is currently caught up in the federal courts. Kobach earlier helped to pass anti-immigrant ordinances in Farmers Branch, Texas, Hazleton, Pennsylvania, and other cities. These laws seek to punish those who aid and abet 鈥渋llegal aliens.鈥 The laws have proven a massive financial burden to the towns that pass them and, in many cases, have sparked racial strife and economic disorder. The Hazleton ordinance, which was struck down by a federal appeals court in September, had left that community of about 20,000 on the hook for $1.4 million and . Kobach, Kansas Secretary of State and lawyer for IRLI, is now running for governor as a Republican. On July 14, 2018, he spoke at a pro-ICE rally in Wichita where he promised to end in-state tuition for undocumented immigrants and , 鈥淚f you want to create a job for an American citizen tomorrow, deport an illegal alien today.鈥
Another FAIR initiative to of the Fourteenth Amendment, a longtime goal of the group, was launched in January 2011. IRLI, FAIR鈥檚 legal arm, working in partnership with State Legislators for Legal Immigration (SLLI), announced a plant to halt what they call 鈥渢he misapplication of the 14th Amendment.鈥 The Fourteenth Amendment ensures that children born in the U.S. are U.S. citizens. Birthright citizenship is how most Americans become citizens.
SLLI is a coalition of about 70 legislators in 38 states dedicated to eliminating 鈥渆conomic attractions鈥 for immigrants and their 鈥渦nlawful invasion鈥 of the U.S. The group is often described as the legislative arm of FAIR, which is apt given the group says on its website that it has a 鈥渨orking partnership鈥 with FAIR. SLLI鈥檚 legislators are the main instigators behind favored FAIR initiatives, including attempts at the state level to deny immigrants various rights through laws modeled on Arizona鈥檚 S.B. 1070.
SLLI has grown dormant in recent years, and the Supreme Court in 2012 struck down most of SB 1070鈥檚 provisions as unconstitutional. FAIR鈥檚 push to end birthright citizenship, however, has not. Encouraged by then-candidate Donald Trump鈥檚 immigration plan, which proposed to 鈥渆nd birthright citizenship鈥 because it is 鈥渢he biggest magnet for illegal immigration,鈥 FAIR published a report claiming the enforcement of birthright citizenship is based on a misinterpretation of the 14th Amendment. On June 29, 2018, IRLI filed an in Fitisemanu v. United States. IRLI alleges the Fourteenth Amendment has been misinterpreted since 1898 and hopes the case will be taken to the Supreme Court.
The 2012 election saw a renewed push for immigration reform at the federal level, with a bipartisan bill passing the Senate before collapsing in the House. In an effort to stop reform legislation, anti-immigrant front groups first created with the help of FAIR in the mid-2000s were revived and rebranded. Groups like Choose Black America and You Don鈥檛 Speak for Me were replaced by the African American Leadership Council (AALC), a name replaced quickly by the Black American Leadership Alliance (BALA), and Alliance for Immigration Justice (AIJ). These groups, which ostensibly opposed reform because it would damage job prospects for minorities and hurt taxpayers, were made up of African Americans and Latinos. Many of them 鈥 such as Leah Durant, a former staffer at IRLI (FAIR鈥檚 legal arm), and Frank Morris, a longtime FAIR board member 鈥 had close ties to nativist organizations. BALA did manage to organize a rally in Washington 鈥 the 鈥D.C. March for Jobs鈥 鈥 that brought together a few thousand activists, including some nativist extremists like D.A. King of Georgia.
Following the failure of reform legislation, FAIR found a new focus. As the number of children fleeing violence in El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua spiked in the summer of 2014, FAIR and its allies began to target organizations aiding these unaccompanied minors. FAIR published a map on its website with the title, 鈥淚s the Border Crisis Coming to a Town Near You?鈥 It named locales where minors were being resettled and the organizations helping in that effort. Protests organized by anti-immigrant activists took place in a number of locations, most infamously in Murrieta, California, where activists blocked a bus full of women and children on their way to an immigration-processing center. In Michigan, anti-Muslim activist Tamyra Murray, a state adviser for FAIR, organized a protest against the relocation of minors in Vassar.
Even without a major immigration reform bill to challenge, FAIR鈥檚 public statements in recent years show that the organization remains true to the white nationalist principles on which it was founded. In late December 2015, Dan Stein told supporters in a video message that without a moratorium on immigration, 鈥渨e鈥檙e going to lose everything about what it means to be an American.鈥
FAIR continues to be involved in pushing anti-immigrant laws at the state and local level. The organization has run campaigns in multiple states.
In March 2018, the organization emailed supporters to contact legislators in the campaign against Maryland becoming a sanctuary state. 鈥淗ouse Bill (HB) 1461 makes it nearly impossible for state and local law enforcement to protect Marylanders against dangerous criminal aliens, even those convicted of the most serious crimes,鈥 FAIR wrote.
In April 2018, FAIR praised the passage of anti-sanctuary bill HB 2315 in Tennessee, and promised to defend the legislation from any legal challenges. That same month, the organization lauded the passage of anti-sanctuary bill SF 481 in Iowa. FAIR鈥檚 State and Local Director Shari Rendall responded to criticism , 鈥淢ost illegal aliens don鈥檛 cooperate with police 鈥 even in sanctuary cities 鈥 because the vast majority come from countries where law enforcement is either corrupt or serves as a tool of state oppression.鈥 The Iowa Police Chiefs Association publicly came out the bill. In December 2017, IRLI a lawsuit against Gary, Indiana, claiming ordinances preventing local law enforcement from detaining immigrants for ICE violate Indiana鈥檚 anti-sanctuary law. FAIR鈥檚 legal arm co-filed a second suit against the city of East Chicago in May 2018.
Oregonians for Immigration Reform (OFIR), an anti-immigrant hate group, is leading the campaign to overturn the state鈥檚 sanctuary policy through a referendum on the November 2018 ballot. FAIR has donated $60,000 to this campaign while IRLI $5,000.
FAIR and IRLI also led the campaign against California鈥檚 sanctuary city state law, which has resulted in over 25 cities voting to oppose SB 54. A group of anti-immigrant activists have testified throughout Southern California in opposition. These activists made antisemitic, anti-LGBT and nativist comments. IRLI also filed two amicus briefs opposing California鈥檚 sanctuary law. In one brief, IRLI claimed laws like the , which ensures resources won鈥檛 be allocated for mass deportations, could lead to 鈥渁rmed confrontation between local and federal officers.鈥
FAIR, IRLI employees enter Trump administration
Former employees of FAIR and IRLI joined the ranks of the highest levels of government. Julie Kirchner, former FAIR director, left the organization in 2015 to act as an immigration adviser to the Trump campaign. She served as the Citizenship and Immigration Services ombudsman. John Zadrozny, also formerly of FAIR, to the State Department following his on the Domestic Policy Council. From 2017 to 2021, Robert Law worked at U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), first as senior policy adviser and subsequently as chief of the Office of Policy and Strategy. Prior to joining the Trump administration, Law served as FAIR鈥檚 lobbying director and director of government relations from 2013 to 2017.
Ian Smith, who was previously employed by FAIR鈥檚 legal arm, IRLI, resigned his position as Homeland Security policy analyst on immigration issues on Aug. 28, 2018, after leaked to and shared by The Atlantic appeared to tie him to white nationalists Richard Spencer and Jared Taylor. That same day, former FAIR staffer and sole Latino employee Joe Gomez filed an with Washington, D.C.鈥檚 Office of Human Rights alleging discrimination and harassment during his tenure with the organization. Included in the litany of complaints was Communications Director Dave Ray inappropriately referencing Gomez鈥檚 ethnicity, often greeting him with 鈥淗ola hombre,鈥 and 鈥淨ue paso?鈥 while other employees used a mocking Hispanic accent. Gomez also alleges FAIR employee Jennifer Hickey used the word 鈥渟---鈥 twice, once referencing him.
The Trump administration to the present
During the Trump administration, FAIR and other anti-immigrant hate groups witnessed the implementation of draconian and nativist policies they spent decades advocating for. President Trump鈥檚 defeat meant that the nativist movement no longer had an ally in the White House.
The implications for groups like FAIR were twofold. First, FAIR, and the nativist movement at large, would need to shift their strategy from policy implementation to policy preservation; secondly, with their influence over the executive branch extinguished, FAIR and other anti-immigrant hate groups would need to refocus their attention on a familiar set of actors: state and local public officials.
The end of the Trump administration also resulted in former senior administration officials joining FAIRs and other anti-immigrant group鈥檚 staff. Mark Morgan, the former acting director of ICE and acting commissioner of CBP, joined FAIR as a senior fellow and spokesperson. Morgan also serves as a visiting fellow in the Davis Institute for National Security and Foreign Policy at The Heritage Foundation.
Additionally, IRLI, FAIR鈥檚 legal arm, hired Tom Homan as a senior fellow. During the Trump administration, Homan served as the acting director of ICE from January 2017 to June 2018. Through their new roles, both Morgan and Homan have used media appearances to excoriate the Biden administration鈥檚 immigration policies, while lauding and promoting the preservation of Trump administration policies.
Across 2021, FAIR has focused its attention on increasing its influence on state and local public officials, particularly sheriffs. On June 25, 2021, FAIR organized a 鈥淩ally to End Biden鈥檚 Border Crisis,鈥 at a segment of the U.S. border in Hereford, Arizona. The speakers at the event included Mark Morgan, Tom Homan, local sheriffs and Brandon Judd, president of the National Border Patrol Council. On April 8, 2021, FAIR promoted a letter signed by 275 sheriffs from across 39 states attacking the Biden Administration鈥檚 immigration strategy. The letter is filled with talking points routinely espoused by groups like FAIR.