Immigration policy has become a major flashpoint in the race for New York’s competitive 19th congressional district.

In a social media post Monday, incumbent Republican Congressman Marc Molinaro shared the debunked claim that Haitian immigrants in an Ohio town are eating pets. In the same tweet, he argued his Democratic opponent, Josh Riley, “owns” the consequences of the situation at the southern border. 

Asked by Spectrum News 1 about the post, Molinaro invoked concerns over illegal border crossings, saying, “I mean no offense to anyone who is simply wishing to make their way in the world … For a year and a half, people like me – moderate, calm, reasonable people – have been saying that this country is experiencing a crisis.”


What You Need To Know

  • Immigration policy has become a major flashpoint in New York's competitive 19th congressional district - one of a handful of seats across New York that could determine which party controls the U.S. House come January

  • In a social media post Monday, incumbent Republican Congressman Marc Molinaro shared the debunked claim that Haitian immigrants in an Ohio town are eating pets. Democratic challenger Josh Riley accused Molinaro of "rage-tweeting."

  • Molinaro casts Riley as untrustworthy on immigration, pointing to legal work he did during the Trump years and a Senate bill he helped craft as a congressional aide in 2013
  • During the Trump years, Riley helped draft “friend of the court” briefs on behalf of former homeland security and immigration officials, challenging certain Trump immigration policies, like the so-called Muslim ban and his push to undo DACA

Asked about the tweet, Riley fired back. 

“What [Molinaro is] doing is rage-tweeting conspiracy theories. He needs to put his phone down, take a deep breath, get off of Twitter and do his job,” Riley said. 

So far this campaign cycle, both candidates in this district, which stretches from Ithaca to the Hudson Valley, have criticized the Biden administration’s handling of the border.

Molinaro has sought to tie Riley to Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris’s work on immigration-related issues as vice president, invoking a fundraising email where Riley voiced support for Harris’s nomination. 

For his part, Riley accuses the Biden administration of making a “big mistake” by waiting as long as it did to roll out June’s executive order tightening asylum restrictions.

Legislatively, Molinaro has touted his vote last year for House Republicans’ strict border bill. Riley has pointed to a separate Senate proposal. Neither has become law. 

Molinaro casts Riley as untrustworthy on immigration, pointing in part to work he did as a lawyer while Donald Trump was in the White House.

“Josh Riley advanced the open border agenda that led the Biden administration to surrender the southern border,” Molinaro said. “His legal argument, advanced by him, was that the administration has the right to ignore the law.”

Riley disputes this. 

During the Trump years, Riley helped draft “friend of the court” briefs on behalf of former homeland security and immigration officials, challenging certain Trump immigration policies, like the so-called Muslim ban.

Another filing Riley worked on blasted Trump’s efforts to undo DACA, which allows undocumented immigrants brought to the U.S. as children to live and work here without fear of deportation. The filing labels DACA “smart policy.”

Defending the use of such discretionary relief in the case of DACA, Riley told Spectrum News 1, “When you have limited law enforcement resources, you can choose - like I would do - and focus them on the drug traffickers. Focus it on the human traffickers. Focus it on keeping dangerous people out of this country.”

Molinaro has also criticized Riley’s work as a Senate staffer on a 2013 immigration bill

The measure called for additional border fencing and more border patrol agents alongside a pathway to citizenship for potentially millions of undocumented immigrants. It never became law. 

“He … takes credit for drafting a mass amnesty bill,” Molinaro argued. 

Riley pushed back, noting the bipartisan support the bill received a decade ago in the Senate. Molinaro “should probably also take that up with Marco Rubio and Lindsey Graham and John McCain and Jeff Flake,” Riley said. 

Asked if he stands by the 2013 bill, Riley said that while the bill was not perfect, it may have prevented “a lot of the problems we’re seeing today.”

The battle in the 19th congressional district is one of a handful of races across New York that could determine which party controls the U.S. House in January.