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Spain Finalizes Amnesty Plan for Over 500,000 Migrants

Spain Finalizes Amnesty Plan for Over 500,000 Migrants

“Spaniards spent centuries liberating themselves from Islamic domination, and one corrupt, left-wing European elite is going to undo it with the swipe of a pen. Cooked.”

It seems like only yesterday that Spaniards were actively discouraging tourists from visiting their country, particularly in cities like Malaga and Barcelona. Their concerns were not unfounded: a surge in tourism was causing overcrowding, straining water resources, and pushing short-term Airbnb rental prices to unaffordable levels.

Against this backdrop, many citizens are unlikely to be pleased that their socialist government, led by Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, has actively welcomed hundreds of thousands of immigrants into the country — a decision that could further strain already stretched resources.

On Tuesday, the Spanish government finalized a migrant amnesty measure that will “regularize” more than 500,000 migrants. In January, it approved a royal decree allowing unauthorized immigrants who arrived before December 31, 2025, to have lived in the country for at least five months, and have no criminal record to apply for legal status. According to Fox News, those who qualify will receive one-year residency and work permits, with possible pathways to citizenship.

The Associated Press reported that this measure “was fast-tracked via a decree that amends immigration laws. By doing it that way, the government was able to bypass parliament, where a previous amnesty attempt stalled and where it lacks a majority.”

Sánchez touted the controversial plan in a letter to his citizens. Below are some excerpts from the translated version:

This regularization is, above all, an act of normalization. Of recognizing the reality of almost half a million people who are already part of our daily lives. People who care for our elderly, who work to ensure food reaches our tables, who innovate, who start businesses, whose children share classrooms, games, and a future with ours. People who build the rich, open, and diverse Spain that we are and that we aspire to be.

It is also an act of justice toward our own history. With our grandparents, who emigrated to America and Europe in search of a better life. With our brothers and sisters who were forced to leave after the 2008 crisis. They helped build the societies that welcomed them. And with their remittances and everything they learned abroad, they also contributed to modernizing Spain.

This regularization is not just an act of justice; it is also a necessity. Spain, like other European countries, is aging. Without new people working and contributing to the system, our prosperity slows, our capacity to innovate weakens, and our public services—healthcare, pensions, education—suffer.

Across much of Europe and even in the U.S., governments are grappling with the consequences of large-scale illegal immigration, as the pace of arrivals outstrips the capacity of institutions to absorb them. The result has been mounting pressure on housing, healthcare, and public services, alongside growing cultural friction in communities struggling to adapt.

In some cases, the sustained surge of immigration has begun to transform their cultural identities. Entire neighborhoods have changed in composition, as new languages, customs, and norms take root. And many citizens feel they are being increasingly marginalized.

Spain is charting a much different course. Rather than tightening restrictions, it has moved to regularize hundreds of thousands of undocumented migrants, framing the policy as both a moral imperative and an economic necessity.

While it may oversimplify Spanish history, RedState’s Bonchie nonetheless raised an interesting point about the new plan on X: “Spaniards spent centuries liberating themselves from Islamic domination, and one corrupt, left-wing European elite is going to undo it with the swipe of a pen. Cooked.”

One of the primary concerns about the amnesty program is that it might encourage even greater numbers of migrants to enter the country. Might?

Whether framed as compassion or necessity, Spain’s sweeping amnesty marks a defining moment in its approach to immigration — one that places it at odds with a growing number of Western nations that are now tightening their borders. The question is not just whether the policy will deliver the economic benefits Sánchez promises, but whether Spain’s housing, infrastructure, and social fabric can absorb the impact. For many citizens already grappling with rising costs and overcrowding, the answer may determine the success or failure of this bold experiment.


Elizabeth writes commentary for Legal Insurrection and The Washington Examiner. She is an academy fellow at The Heritage Foundation. Please follow Elizabeth on X or LinkedIn.

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Comments


 
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 15
ztakddot | April 14, 2026 at 5:23 pm

20% of Spanish population is foreign born. Might even been new immigrants.
Destructive. Their PM is China loving putz and their population might be stupider than our democrats, Why are they in NATO again?


 
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jqusnr | April 14, 2026 at 5:50 pm

what ever could go wrong


 
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 6
Chitragupta | April 14, 2026 at 6:28 pm

The Reconquista – Part Dos?

Search – What is a Spanish Inquisition?


 
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 9
guyjones | April 14, 2026 at 6:54 pm

So, this communist/leftist idiot, PM Sanchez, wants to usher in a revival of an Islamic caliphate.

Failing, utterly, to learn the lessons of history. Unbelievable and suicidal stupidity.


 
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 5
gonzotx | April 14, 2026 at 7:04 pm

So sad, I never got to Spain
29 years ago had a chance, dang

Poor Europe


     
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     5
    Andy in reply to gonzotx. | April 14, 2026 at 7:32 pm

    I went at exactly that time. By myself. Spring break. College senior year just before starting my internship in the tech world with only 4 credits left to graduate.

    I made it up as I went. Madrid 1 night. Malaga the rest of the week during Santa Semana (week prior to easter). Quite the week.

    Have wanted to trace those steps again with my family, but not anymore.


     
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    diver64 in reply to gonzotx. | April 15, 2026 at 3:43 am

    We have a friend who uprooted her family, husband and 3 small children, to move to Spain. They were denied initial work visa’s and had to hang out in Ireland of all places for a year then secured the work visa’s and went back. They are not impressed as Spain looked great in the history books but today isn’t so nice. I’m sure this won’t improve it much.


 
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DSHornet | April 14, 2026 at 7:05 pm

So we need to leave Spain, if we have any military presence there – Torrejon Air Base was given back to the Spaniards thirtyish years ago – and walk away. They have made their bed. Let them lie in it. They are no longer an ally.
.


 
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TrickyRicky | April 14, 2026 at 8:20 pm

I spent 4 months on the Costa del Sol right after high school. Malaga, Torremolinos, forays into Morocco, all at age 17. Quite a fun time.. I’ve been contemplating a return trip, farther north, some very cool train trips available. Fifty-three years later I’m not sure I want to see the changes that have occurred.

Today, millions of Spaniards are muttering, “General Franco, you SOB, where are you when you’re needed most?”


 
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ztakddot | April 14, 2026 at 8:46 pm

Can’t we send our migrants there? At least our migrants from south of our border speak the language, Most of them.

They’re not going to like how this turns out.

Oh, and to all the Europeans? All those trips to Ibiza? Yeah, it won’t be the same.


 
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 2
Whitewall | April 14, 2026 at 10:21 pm

So who will play El Degüello. first?


 
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Aarradin | April 14, 2026 at 11:23 pm

I was just reading an article elsewhere talking about the fact that >20% of Spain’s entire population is now foreign born.

This is what Rubio was talking about when he warned Europe it was engaging in “Civilizational Erasure”.

These leftist politicians enable it because they benefit from it – temporarily. The new migrants vote in a block, with very high turnout, and support pro-immigration politicians (all from the far left) who then enable ever increasing immigration.

Don’t they have children? Are they seriously this short sighted?? What do they imagine will happen when the immigrant population is large enough that they no longer need native born politicians to front their cause???


 
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isfoss | April 15, 2026 at 8:53 am

Spain hates tourists and the revenue they bring in, but migrants are welcome?


 
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shrinkDave | April 15, 2026 at 9:15 am

Spain out of NATO! Or USA out of NATO.

Any of you tempted to run interference for socialists and that includes socialists who claim to be on the right congratulations on this front row seating to what it looks like.


 
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 1
MK Ultra | April 15, 2026 at 6:43 pm

Shockingly, Spain has very restrictive laws regarding personal firearm ownership.

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