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Visa Program Abused by China to Support Hillary Clinton, Democratic Candidates: What the Book Claims and What We Know
The allegation has ignited fresh debate over immigration policy, foreign influence in U.S. politics, campaign finance laws, and the integrity of federal visa programs — raising questions about what actually happened, where claims are based on documented evidence, and where they remain disputed or unverified.
This blog post examines:
The historical and legal context
What Schweizer’s book asserts
Where disagreements and uncertainties remain
The Federal Visa Program at the Center: EB‑5 Immigrant Investor Visa
The policy rationale behind EB‑5 was economic: to channel foreign capital into U.S. job‑creating ventures. Over time, it evolved to include regional center designations that make it easier for investors to pool capital into large infrastructure or development projects. That structure, critics argue, has also made EB‑5 vulnerable to misuse, fraud, and political influence.
The Book’s Claim: Abuse of EB‑5 to Support Political Campaigns
Key figures in the mid‑1990s Clinton fundraising controversies — including Maria Hsia and John Huang — had ties to Chinese networks and later became associated with Democratic campaign fundraising.
A Senate investigation from that era identified Hsia as an agent of the Chinese government who concealed affiliations while organizing political contributions.