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Immigration


RECORDS CONFIRM TRUMP’S MOTHER-IN-LAW CAME TO U.S. THROUGH PROCESS HE DERIDED

By Maria Sacchetti
March 25, 2024 at 7:58 p.m. EDT

Amalija Knavs and Viktor Knavs, Melania Trump's parents, return to the White
House from Bedminster, N.J., on June 11, 2017. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington
Post)

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Melania Trump sponsored her mother to immigrate to the United States through a
family-based process that former president Donald Trump aggressively sought to
end, according to federal immigration records released Monday.


Sign up for Fact Checker, our weekly review of what's true, false or in-between
in politics.ArrowRight


The records detail for the first time the full path that the former first lady’s
mother, Amalija Knavs, followed from Slovenia to the United States — and how the
Trump administration’s policies would have made that far more difficult for
others. Knavs died in January at age 78.



Trump is the likely Republican candidate for president in the 2024 race against
President Biden, a Democrat. The Trump campaign declined to comment through a
spokeswoman.

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Melania Trump used a legal pathway that her husband and his top advisers had
repeatedly disparaged as “chain migration,” the right of U.S. citizens to bring
their parents to the United States.

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Federal law since 1965 has said U.S. citizens may apply to bring minor children
and parents to join them in the United States without having to wait a long time
for a visa. Citizens may sponsor siblings and adult children, but they typically
wait longer for visas.

During his presidency, Trump endorsed a bill called the RAISE Act that would
have limited priority sponsorship to the spouses and minor children of U.S.
citizens, taking parents off the fast-track list.

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“The Democrats have been told, and fully understand, that there can be no DACA
without the desperately needed WALL at the Southern Border and an END to the
horrible Chain Migration & ridiculous Lottery System of Immigration etc.,” Trump
tweeted on Dec. 29, 2017. “We must protect our Country at all cost!”

Trump favored implementing a Canadian-style point-based merit system to
prioritize skilled workers, which also could have affected Knavs.

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On her 2009 immigrant visa application, Knavs said she graduated from high
school in 1964 and attended the College for Fashion Design in Slovenia until
1966, though it did not say if she obtained a diploma. She married in 1967.

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By the time Knavs applied for an immigrant visa, records show she was fluent in
Slovenian but “learning English.” Her citizenship application says she retired
in 1998.

Michael Wildes, Knavs’s immigration lawyer, declined to comment on her
immigration file in a telephone interview Monday, saying such records are
typically confidential. The Washington Post requested the records from the
Department of Homeland Security after Knavs’s death, when privacy protections
are diminished.

The 165-page immigration file released Monday is heavily redacted in some parts,
but it confirms that Knavs was sponsored by an adult child for a green card, and
it lists the financial sponsor of the parent as “Melania Trump.”

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Wildes, a Democrat, praised family-based immigration as part of a long tradition
in the United States and called Trump’s criticism of that system “some of the
silly politics of the day.”

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He said the Knavses “reveled in becoming citizens in this country,” and that
Melania Trump wanted to ensure that her parents were “taken care of” and that
they could travel freely to the United States to care for the Trumps’ son,
Barron.

Wildes has said that Melania Trump arrived in the United States from Slovenia in
1996 for modeling work and obtained a green card around 2001 based on her
“extraordinary ability” as a model.

Records show that Knavs was a regular visitor to the United States after her
daughter moved to this country and became a permanent resident.

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Melania Trump married Donald Trump in 2005 and had their son the following year.
She said she also became a citizen in 2006.

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She applied to sponsor her mother for legal permanent residency, known as a
green card, in 2008, the records show, and signed an affidavit the following
year pledging to support her mother financially.

Knavs became a legal permanent resident, one step before U.S. citizenship, on
March 16, 2010.

Green-card holders may apply for U.S. citizenship after five years. But records
show Knavs waited longer.

She applied in August 2017, a few months after Trump took office and as he was
criticizing “chain migration.”

In May 2018, Knavs appeared in New York for an interview and citizenship test,
which involves questions in English and a test on U.S. civics. She correctly
answered questions such as the name of the U.S. national anthem (“The
Star-Spangled Banner”) and the ocean on the west coast of the United States
(Pacific).

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Asked “What is the ‘rule of law?’” she gave no answer.

Wildes has said the family received no special treatment. Records show Knavs
filled out a citizenship application, answering questions about whether she was
associated with the Communist Party (no) and whether she would bear arms to
defend the United States (yes). She paid the $725 application fee and said she
was living at the time in Trump Tower in New York.

Knavs took the oath of citizenship with her husband Viktor — whose immigration
records are not public — on Aug. 9, 2018, in New York, shortly after one of the
worst debacles of Trump’s presidency, when his administration separated migrant
parents from their children at the southern border without a plan to reunite
them.

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Melania Trump garnered attention in June 2018 for visiting a children’s shelter
on the border wearing a green jacket with the words on the back, “I really don’t
care, do u?”

Wildes had earlier confirmed that Viktor and Amalija Knavs, as well as their
other daughter, Ines, who is Barron’s godmother, came to the United States
legally with Melania Trump’s help, according to “The Art of Her Deal,” a
biography of Melania Trump by Post reporter Mary Jordan.

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