Newsom Funneled Nearly $1 Billion to Immigration NGOs: Report
A growing political fight is unfolding over California’s immigration spending, after an investigative report alleged that the state has built a large publicly funded ecosystem of nonprofit organizations providing legal aid, housing assistance, and advocacy tied to immigration policy.
The City Journal report claims that California has directed roughly $1 billion in state funding toward nonprofit groups involved in migrant services during and after the Biden-era border surge.
It alleges that this funding supports not only humanitarian assistance such as shelter, transportation, and legal representation, but also broader legal and policy efforts that influence immigration enforcement outcomes in court.
The report places these developments against the backdrop of record migration levels at the U.S.–Mexico border in recent years.
It contrasts California’s approach with states that increased enforcement measures, arguing that California expanded a publicly funded network designed to support and process incoming migrants through contracted service providers.
State contract data cited in the investigation reportedly shows major funding awarded to established nonprofit organizations, including Catholic Charities, Jewish Family Services, Centro Legal de la Raza, and the Immigration Institute of the Bay Area.
These groups provide services ranging from housing and transportation assistance to legal support for individuals navigating asylum applications and deportation proceedings.
Beyond these larger organizations, the report focuses on specialized legal aid providers embedded in California’s system.
One example the outlet provides is Oasis Legal Services, which focuses on immigration assistance for LGBT individuals.
The investigation claims internal reporting from the organization referenced client demographics, including individuals described as living with HIV or identified as being at higher risk.
Those claims have drawn attention in the report due to questions about how medical and demographic data intersect with publicly funded legal services.
Oasis has stated its role is limited to legal representation and denies encouraging illegal immigration.
Another organization highlighted is the Immigrant Defenders Law Center (ImmDef), which receives state funding to represent individuals in deportation proceedings.
According to the report, ImmDef operates under a broad representation model that does not exclude clients based on prior legal history and also advocates for wider immigration enforcement reform.
The investigation also references county-level immigration defense programs that provide legal representation in removal cases.
It notes that some programs have represented noncitizens with prior criminal convictions, though administrators cited in the report describe such cases as a small portion of overall caseloads.
Lawmakers have considered limits on public funding for certain categories of cases, but enforcement remains inconsistent and politically contested.
Activist organizations are also part of the report’s focus, particularly the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA).
The investigation alleges the group receives significant taxpayer funding while coordinating outreach, legal assistance efforts, and rapid-response activity tied to immigration enforcement actions.
CHIRLA has rejected allegations of wrongdoing, stating that its work is centered on nonviolent advocacy and community-based support services.
California officials responding to the report have denied that public funds are used to facilitate illegal activity, maintaining that spending is directed toward lawful humanitarian aid and legal services for immigrant communities.
They argue the programs are intended to ensure due process and support vulnerable populations navigating complex immigration systems.
Critics cited in the report argue the broader structure of California’s funding network raises oversight concerns, claiming that legal aid, advocacy, and public financing have become increasingly interconnected in ways that may indirectly influence immigration enforcement policy.
The report does not present confirmed wrongdoing by state agencies or nonprofit groups but raises questions about transparency, accountability, and the long-term policy effects of California’s approach to funding immigration-related services.
Continue Scrolling for the Comments

Leave a Comment