Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin was accused of parroting a âracistâ comment about migrants Wednesday when he said the United States only wants âthe right kind of immigrantsâ in the country.
Mullin, who recently replaced Kristi Noem, raised familiar criticisms about the previous administration allowing immigrants into the country, saying those with criminal records were permitted to reside. He complained of the high cost associated with deporting immigrants because the U.S. offers everyone due process â or the right a fair hearing.
âBut the problem is we want immigration, we want legal immigration, people that want to make the country stronger, weâre a nation of immigrants, we understand that,â Mullin told Fox News host Laura Ingraham.
Ingraham interjected, âThe right kind of immigrants.â
âBut the right kind of immigrants, thatâs right,â Mullin said in agreement.

Mullin did not specify what he meant by âthe right kindâ of immigrants during the show, though he complained about those who âtake advantage of the United Statesâs generosity.â
When asked for clarity, a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson told The Independent that Mullin was referring to âlegal onesâ when referring to the âright kind of immigrants.â
While Mullin and other administration officials often claim they want immigrants to enter the U.S. legally, many of President Donald Trumpâs immigration policies have impacted methods of legal immigration.
A recent analysis from the CATO Institute found that the president’s crackdown on the ability to claim refugee and asylum, implementation of travel bans and regulations on student and H-1B employment visas led to a larger decrease in legal immigration than illegal immigration.
The administrationâs immigration policies have disproportionately impacted people of color with travel bans on nearly a dozen African countries, the end of asylum claims at the U.S.âMexico border, immigration agents using racial profiling, and removing protected status for people from Haiti, Myanmar, Honduras, Venezuela and Ethiopia, among other countries.

As a result, Mullinâs claim about âthe right kind of immigrantsâ coming into the U.S. was interpreted as a dog whistle for a preference over white immigrants.
âWhy donât they just say âwhiteâ?â X user Michael Freeman wrote.
Nick, another X user, replied: âTodayâs blatant racismâŚ. by âthe right kind of immigrantsâ they mean white people. I remember the days when the republicans used dog whistles. Those days are long gone.â
âThis is just disgustingly racist,â X user Shawn wrote.
While those opposed to the harsh immigration policies criticized Mullinâs comments, some MAGA voters disagreed with Mullin about wanting âthe right kind of immigrantsâ in the U.S. â saying they didnât want any form of immigration.
Comments and reports on conservative commentator Eric Daughertyâs X post were flooded with people displeased with the secretaryâs claim about legal immigration.
