California Proposal to Give Home Loans to Illegal Aliens Comes Under Fire

Jason Hopkins /

DAILY CALLER NEWS FOUNDATIONCalifornia lawmakers are one step closer to making hundreds of millions of taxpayer-funded home loans available to residents living in the country illegally.

Democrats on the California Senate Appropriations Committee late last week unanimously approved AB 1840 to move forward, according to an official vote tally for the legislation. The bill has one last chance to be struck down on the floor of the state Senate, where Democrats wield majority power, before it lands on the desk of Gov. Gavin Newsom, also a Democrat.

The legislation seeks to amend the California Dream For All Shared Appreciation Loan program, an initiative launched last year that provides first-time homebuyers with a loan of up to 20% of the house’s purchase price for down payment or closing cost. If passed and signed into law, illegal migrants living in California would be eligible to apply for a piece of the pie.

“Once again, California has chosen to prioritize illegal immigration and fiscal irresponsibility over the needs of its citizens, all while facing a $60 billion deficit that will ultimately be passed onto taxpayers,” San Diego County Supervisor Jim Desmond said in a statement provided to the Daily Caller News Foundation.

“California is in dire financial straits, yet lawmakers continue to prioritize programs that incentivize illegal immigration and strain local resources,” Desmond said. “Expanding this program to include illegal immigrants is not just another handout—it’s a massive overreach that shifts the financial burden onto law-abiding taxpayers.”

These taxpayer-funded home loans are interest-free and borrowers are not required to dole out monthly payments, making the program incredibly popular with California residents.

When applications for the $300 million program first opened up in May 2023—offering interest-free loans to roughly 2,300 middle- and lower-income homebuyers—the money ran out in less than two weeks, according to the Los Angeles Times. State officials have since tightened eligibility for the program, requiring that at least one of the applicants be a first-generation homebuyer and replacing the first-come-first-serve model with a lottery.

Despite California’s struggling to cope with a budget deficit in the tens of billions of dollars, and availability for the program incredibly tight already, one state lawmaker said he felt the loan program wasn’t inclusive enough.

Assemblymember Joaquin Arambula, a Democrat from Fresno, first introduced AB 1840 in January, with the goal of broadening the definition of “first-time home buyer” to include illegal immigrants. The lawmaker argued in March that the “social and economic benefits of homeownership should be available to everyone,” according to KTLA-TV in Los Angeles. Arambula did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The legislation has since easily passed the Democrat-dominated California Assembly and sailed through the state Senate Appropriations Committee—with opposition exclusively relegated to GOP lawmakers.

“California’s budget deficit continues to grow and Democratic lawmakers are so out of touch with everyday Californians that they and are quite literally taking money away from law-abiding citizens, their own constituents, and handing it over as a free gift to people who broke federal law to cross the border illegally,” California state Sen. Brian Dahle said.

“There’s no accountability and transparency when it comes to the Democrats’ spending sprees, and it’s unfortunate because many Californians see homeownership as nothing more than an illusion at this point,” Dahle said.

California is experiencing a massive budget shortfall.

State lawmakers in June approved a budget that slashed spending and temporarily raised taxes on businesses in an effort to shore up a nearly $50 billion budget deficit, according to The Associated Press.

The dire financial situation marks a far cry from the surplus of more than $100 billion that the state enjoyed roughly two years ago. But those revenue spikes proved only temporary as rising unemployment, inflation and a slowing of the tech industry has battered California pocketbooks.

The state’s deficit was roughly $32 billion in 2023, which grew to more than $46 billion earlier this year and is now around $60 billion, according to California Republicans—drawing questions as to why lawmakers would open up a highly coveted loan program to a large swath of the population that does not hold legal status.

Nearly 2 million illegal aliens live in California, according to data published by the Pew Research Center in July.

It’s not immediately clear if Newsom will sign the legislation. When reached for comment, a spokesperson said the governor’s office doesn’t typically comment on pending legislation, adding that the governor would “evaluate the legislation on its merits” should it reach his desk.

Approval of AB 1840 came on the same day that Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign announced she would unveil a proposal similar to her home state’s current program: $25,000 in down payment support for first-time homebuyers, including greater support for first-generation homeowners.

It’s not clear if the proposal from Harris—who has recently attempted to cast herself as more of a border hawk—would explicitly exclude illegal immigrants. Her campaign did not respond to a request for comment from the Daily Caller News Foundation.

California Republicans, in the meantime, are left balking at their own state’s legislative actions.

“Many legal California residents can’t afford a home in their own state,” said state Sen. Brian Jones, one of only two GOP members on the Senate Appropriations Committee.

“Instead of addressing the housing crisis, radical Democrat lawmakers want to help illegal immigrants buy houses with the gift of taxpayer funds,” Jones said. “With a $62 billion budget deficit, we need to focus on preserving essential government functions, not unfair political spending for those here illegally.”

Originally published by the Daily Caller News Foundation