Banning Perpetrators of Religious Persecution Act of 2026
Sponsored By: Representative Moore (NC)
Introduced
Summary
This bill would bar visa admission for people who commit particularly severe violations of religious freedom. It would add a new inadmissibility ground to U.S. immigration law and require public identification of those barred, with narrow foreign policy exceptions.
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- People accused of religious persecution: Aliens who, while serving as foreign government officials or at any time while abroad, directed, authorized, significantly supported, participated in, or carried out particularly severe violations of religious freedom would be inadmissible to the United States under a new clause tied to the International Religious Freedom Act definitions.
- Department of State and public transparency: The Secretary of State would be required to post the names of those found inadmissible and the countries or locations where violations occurred on the Department of State's public website, subject to confidentiality limits in existing immigration law.
- Diplomatic exceptions and congressional notice: The Secretary could exclude a name from public posting on a case-by-case basis for adverse foreign policy reasons and that exclusion would be sole and unreviewable, but the Secretary must provide semiannual reports to Congress explaining such exclusions.
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Bill Overview
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 0 benefits, 1 costs, 1 mixed.
Ban on admitting religious persecutors
If enacted, the bill would make certain noncitizens ineligible for U.S. visas or admission. It would bar officials who, while serving a foreign government, were responsible for or directly carried out particularly severe violations of religious freedom. It would also bar people outside the United States who directed, authorized, significantly supported, participated in, were responsible for, or carried out such violations. This rule would take effect upon enactment.
Public list of barred individuals
If enacted, the bill would require the State Department to post on its public website the names of people barred under the new religious-persecution rule and where the violations happened. The bill would override certain confidentiality limits for those postings. The Secretary of State could exclude a name when public release would harm U.S. foreign policy, but the Secretary would have to report to Congress every six months explaining each exclusion. This requirement would take effect upon enactment.
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Sponsors & CoSponsors
Sponsor
Moore (NC)
NC • R
Cosponsors
Luna
FL • R
Sponsored 4/2/2026
Fedorchak
ND • R
Sponsored 4/2/2026
Kennedy (UT)
UT • R
Sponsored 4/2/2026
Self
TX • R
Sponsored 4/2/2026
McDowell
NC • R
Sponsored 4/2/2026
Fleischmann
TN • R
Sponsored 4/2/2026
Mace
SC • R
Sponsored 4/2/2026
Grothman
WI • R
Sponsored 4/2/2026
Steube
FL • R
Sponsored 4/2/2026
Webster (FL)
FL • R
Sponsored 4/2/2026
Roll Call Votes
No roll call votes available for this bill.
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