The DIGNITY Act of 2025 (H.R.4393) is gaining support from a wide range of national organizations and lawmakers, according to a recent announcement from its sponsors. The legislation, which aims to reform the United States’ immigration system, now has endorsements from more than 50 national groups, including business associations, faith-based organizations, and advocacy groups.
Representative María Elvira Salazar commented on the bill’s progress: “The Dignity Act brings an urgently needed solution to the United States’ broken immigration system. It secures our borders, restores law and order, and provides a responsible, earned process for millions of hard-working people who have lived here for years and contributed to our country. The Dignity Act lowers costs for Americans, strengthens our workforce, and gives hard-working men and women a path forward. It is not citizenship. It is not amnesty. It is dignity.”
A new poll conducted by McLaughlin & Associates indicates that 51 percent of Americans support the DIGNITY Act while 33 percent oppose it. The survey showed that support spans across different regions and political affiliations. Respondents indicated they are interested in policies that secure the border, protect American workers, and provide a regulated process for long-term immigrant workers.
The legislation includes measures such as increased border security personnel, mandatory E-Verify implementation, and restoring operational control at the border. It proposes ending illegal labor practices while establishing an American Worker Fund intended to retrain U.S. workers for better job opportunities.
The act also introduces the Dignity Program—a process requiring undocumented individuals with clean records to pay restitution, undergo background checks, and earn legal status without granting citizenship or amnesty.
Among those endorsing the act are organizations like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, National Association of Home Builders, National Retail Federation, American Legion, National Immigration Forum, FWD.us., Evangelical Immigration Table as well as several business councils and coalitions representing various industries.
Supporters argue that these provisions will address labor shortages in critical sectors while providing employers with access to a lawful workforce.

