"It would allow these individuals, once they're apprehended, to be held until their hearing," she said, while also allowing "any court, not just an immigration court, but any court, to hear these cases."
Blackburn tied the effort to Minnesota, where hosts referenced a federal enforcement surge and what they called "overwhelming fraud" that recently surfaced.
"The American people have looked at what has happened in Minnesota with billions of dollars of fraud," she said, adding that whistleblowers elsewhere have flagged alleged fraud in daycare centers, elder care, healthcare, and other programs.
Asked how denaturalization works, Blackburn said that "there is a process through the NIA that you can be denaturalized, and what this does is to make certain that fraud is explicit in one of those portions."