Banning Perpetrators of Religious Persecution Act of 2026
Sponsored By: Senator Sen. Budd, Ted [R-NC]
Introduced
Summary
Blocks visas for people who commit religious persecution. This bill would create a new inadmissibility ground to deny visas to aliens who directed, authorized, significantly supported, participated in, were responsible for, or carried out violations of religious freedom.
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- People who served as foreign government officials and who were responsible for "particularly severe" violations of religious freedom, as defined in the International Religious Freedom Act, could be denied visas.
- People who, while outside the United States, directed, authorized, significantly supported, participated in, were responsible for, or carried out violations of religious freedom could also be found inadmissible.
- The Department of State would be required to post the names and the countries or locations where the violations occurred on its public website. The Secretary of State may withhold names on a case by case basis for adverse foreign policy reasons and must submit a semiannual report to Congress explaining those withheld disclosures.
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Bill Overview
Analyzed Economic Effects
1 provisions identified: 0 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
Ban on religious persecutors entering United States
This bill would bar certain noncitizens from getting U.S. visas or admission. It would bar any alien who, while serving as a foreign government official, was responsible for or directly carried out "particularly severe" violations of religious freedom (as defined in the International Religious Freedom Act). It would also bar any alien who, while outside the United States, directed, authorized, significantly supported, participated in, was responsible for, or carried out particularly severe violations or violations of religious freedom. The Secretary of State would post the names of people found inadmissible and the countries or locations where the violations occurred on a public Department of State website. The Secretary could withhold an individual's identity from public disclosure on a case-by-case, unreviewable basis if release would harm foreign policy, but must send a semiannual report to Congress explaining each such exclusion under 22 U.S.C. 2723(a). The public posting rule would apply notwithstanding confidentiality limits in INA section 222(f). The rule would take effect upon enactment.
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Sponsors & CoSponsors
Sponsor
Sen. Budd, Ted [R-NC]
NC • R
Cosponsors
Sen. Blackburn, Marsha [R-TN]
TN • R
Sponsored 1/15/2026
Sen. Moody, Ashley [R-FL]
FL • R
Sponsored 1/15/2026
Sen. Cotton, Tom [R-AR]
AR • R
Sponsored 1/15/2026
Sen. Banks, Jim [R-IN]
IN • R
Sponsored 1/15/2026
Sen. Kennedy, John [R-LA]
LA • R
Sponsored 1/15/2026
Sen. Lankford, James [R-OK]
OK • R
Sponsored 1/15/2026
Sen. Cruz, Ted [R-TX]
TX • R
Sponsored 1/15/2026
Roll Call Votes
No roll call votes available for this bill.
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