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Francis Cissna, head of USCIS, to address anti-immigrant hate group Center for Immigration Studies today

Francis Cissna, the director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), is to appear at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., on August 15 to speak at an event sponsored by the anti-immigrant hate group Center for Immigration Studies (CIS).

Update: Following the publishing of this blog, the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS) hasĚýĚýthat the event featuringĚýCissnaĚýis now closed to the public. In response toĚýCissna’sĚýappearance, Democratic WhipĚýStenyĚýHoyer of Maryland sent a letter to the USCIS director, urging him to cancel his visit. Citing CIS’s long history of circulating white nationalist and antisemitic writings as well as its demonization of immigrants, HoyerĚý, “It would be a shame for the hardworking men and women of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services to be tainted by your address to this hate group.”

Cissna is the third Trump administration official to take part in CIS’s “Immigration Newsmaker” events this year, following appearances by the Executive Office for Immigration Review’s director , and former Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Director Thomas Homan.

Cissna’s scheduled appearance reaffirms the cozy relationship between the Trump administration and the organized anti-immigrant movement in the United States. This relationship goes well beyond anti-immigrant hate groups the President, as former hate group members join the administration on a regular basis. The same month that Cissna was approved by the Senate to take up his position as USCIS director, Robert Law left another anti-immigrant hate group, the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), to join USCIS as a senior policy advisor, according to a by Media Matters for America.

Both CIS and FAIR were founded by white nationalist John Tanton, a population control and eugenics advocate who created the network of anti-immigrant groups we see in the Beltway and beyond today. Tanton’s worldview and reason for creating this network can be summed up by a line he wrote to a friend in 1993. "I've 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.”

For over three decades, CIS has published a litany of reports and blog posts demonizing immigrants and blaming them for virtually all of the United States’ ills. CIS has also circulated white nationalist content thousands of times. Its staffers and leadership have to immigrants as “Third-World gold-diggers,” immigrants for “the burgeoning street gang problem” in the United States. Longtime CIS head Mark Krikorian the following after the devastating earthquake in 2010 that killed an estimated 160,000 people. “My guess is that Haiti’s so screwed up because it wasn’t colonized long enough.”

Cissna is no stranger to CIS. In 2015, while working for Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley, he a CIS panel discussion and asked a question. CIS publishes the transcripts and videos for each of its panel discussions, but the transcript for the event that Cissna attended is missing from its website. An earlier version of it that was published on the CIS site can be viewed , with video available .Ěý

Since joining USCIS, Cissna has won praise from nativist groups for changing its mission statement and removing the sentence that the U.S. is a “nation of immigrants.” The new statement, by Cissna in a February 2018 letter, instead emphasized “protecting Americans, securing the homeland, and honoring our values.”

Homan’s appearance at the CIS event in June came under scrutiny from immigrant and civil rights organizations and prompted New York Congressman Joe Crowley to write a letter to ICE asking him to reconsider his speaking engagement. In a climate where anti-immigrant hysteria is on the rise, Cissna’s speech next week will unfortunately further lend legitimacy to CIS.

Photo byĚýAP Images/Alex Brandon

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