Democratic Michigan Sen. Elissa Slotkin, one of several elected Democrats seeking to lead the party out of the wilderness, issued her strongest condemnation of illegal immigration to date and suggested her Democratic colleagues were out of step with voters on the issue.
Slotkin told the New York Times in an interview published Wednesday that migrants who enter the United States with no legal status should âgo homeâ and suggested that crossing the border illegally should be recognized as a criminal offense. Though Slotkinâs tough on-illegal immigration comments notably diverge from those of other congressional Democrats choosing to double down on abolishing immigration enforcement, Republicans argue that she has consistently voted for open borders. (RELATED: Sen. Elissa Slotkin Admits âWar Planâ To Defeat Trump Agenda Is Not Enough To Retake Senate)
Slotkin has seldom broken with Democrats to join GOP lawmakers in voting to crack down on illegal migration or provide additional resources to federal immigration authorities during her time in Congress. NumbersUSA, a conservative immigration-focused advocacy organization, gives Slotkin a 12% lifetime rating on its âimmigration-reduction grade card.â
The Michigan Democrat was first elected to the House in 2018 and the Senate in 2024 winning a congressional district and state that President Donald Trump also carried during the past election cycle. She has quickly gained national prominence by delivering the Democratsâ rebuttal to the presidentâs joint address to Congress in March and has rolled out a âwar planâ to counter Trump who she argues poses an âexistentialâ threat to democracy.
âIâm a national security person by training. I spent my entire career trying to prevent threats to the homeland,â Slotkin told the Timesâ David Leonhardt while defending her vote for the Laken Riley Act in January. âAnd if youâre here illegally, you shouldnât be.â
â[I]f youâre here illegally, you have committed a crime and you should go home,â Slotkin added. â[I] think we have to be honest with ourselves that while our immigration system is not functioning right and we owe an actual immigration plan for a nation of immigrants, that doesnât mean someone has the right to be here illegally.â
Slotkin was one of 12 Senate Democrats who crossed the aisle to back the Laken Riley Act, the first piece of legislation Trump signed into law during his second term, which made it easier for federal immigration authorities to detain and deport illegal migrants. She notably supported an effort by Senate Democrats, however, to weaken the bill by voting âyesâ on a failed amendment that would have prevented states from suing the federal government for failing to enforce immigration laws.
The Michigan Democrat also voted against Senate Republicansâ budget resolution in April unlocking more than $175 billion in border security funding in the presidentâs âone big, beautiful bill.â The budget blueprint also laid the groundwork to enact an extension of the expiring provisions of the 2017 Trump tax cuts and deliver on the presidentâs campaign pledge to eliminate taxes on tipped wages and overtime pay.
She voted ânoâ on a resolution in July 2024 condemning the Biden administration and its âborder czarâ former Vice President Kamala Harris for failing to secure the border during Bidenâs term.
Slotkin also opposed House Republicansâ sweeping border security legislation known as H.R.2, the Secure the Border Act, during a vote in May 2023. The bill would have required most employers to use E-Verify to ensure new hires have legal status to work in the United States, issued new restrictions on asylum seekers and directed the Department of Homeland Security to resume border wall construction.

WASHINGTON, DC â JANUARY 15: Sen. Elissa Slotkin (D-MI) speaks during a Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs hearing on Capitol Hill on January 15, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
Slotkin supported former President Joe Bidenâs Build Back Better Act in 2021, which would have among other things granted amnesty to more than 7 million illegal migrants living in the United States.
During Trumpâs first term in 2019, she also joined House Democrats in voting to rescind the presidentâs national emergency declaration allowing Trump to use Department of Defense funds to build the southern border wall.
Democratic strategists have suggested that elected Democratsâ failure to address the surge in illegal immigration during Bidenâs sole White House term contributed to the partyâs lackluster performance last November.
Leonhardt has notably argued that Democrats should shift right on illegal immigration and border security, allowing the party to become more competitive in national elections and align better with the median voterâs beliefs about immigration.
Though 54% of registered voters believe the Trump administrationâs immigration enforcement efforts have âgone too far,â roughly the same amount of voters support deporting illegal migrants back to their home countries and believe the government should not grant legal status to foreigners who came to the United States illegally, according to an April New York Times-Siena survey.
Slotkin has also called on Democrats to reject identity politics and employ an âalpha energyâ that appeals to voters who believe the party is âweakâ and âwoke.â
Slotkin notably broke with Democrats in May to overturn Californiaâs de facto national electric vehicle mandate. No other Senate Democrat joined her in raising concerns about banning the sale of new gas-powered cars by 2035 in California and 11 other states who adopted the Golden Stateâs vehicle emission rule.
âI donât think we can stand up to Trump in a credible, thoughtful, strategic way if we donât own the mistakes we made in the last election that got us here,â Slotkin told the Times.
A spokesperson for Slotkin did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundationâs request for comment.
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