Saturday, June 27, 2026
37.9 C
New Delhi

Burn in the USA: Trump admin to speed up denaturalization

Burn in the USA: Trump admin to speed up denaturalization

Representative image (AI-generated)

WASHINGTON: The Trump administration has directed the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) to expand efforts to revoke US citizenship from foreign-born naturalized Americans, setting internal targets of referring 100 to 200 denaturalization cases per month to the Justice Department in fiscal 2026, according to internal guidance reported this week. The directive represents a significant escalation of a legal tool that has historically been used sparingly and only in narrow circumstances.The guidance, issued to USCIS field offices this week, instructs officials to prioritize individuals who “unlawfully obtained US citizenship” through fraud during the naturalization process. A June 2025 Justice Department memo elevated denaturalization to one of the department’s top enforcement priorities, highlighting targets such as gang members, drug cartel affiliates, financial fraudsters, and violent criminals. But immigration advocates fear an overreach given the rising anti-immigrant sentiment in MAGA circles and the allocation of quotas, with citizens from Mexico, India, Vietnam, Philippines, who account for a large number of naturalized Americans, in the cross hairs. Mexico topped the list in 2023 and 2024, accounting for 107,700 and 111,460 naturalized Americans respectively, while India stood second with 49,700 and 59,050 naturalisations in the past two years. In all, the US has about 26 million naturalized Americans, with up to a million qualifying foreign -born immigrants taking up US citizenship each year. Denaturalization—the revocation of citizenship obtained through naturalization by immigrants —is permitted under federal law only when the government can prove that citizenship was obtained through material fraud or misrepresentation, concealment of key facts, or involvement in specific disqualifying conduct such as terrorism or war crimes. The burden of proof is high, requiring the government to present “clear, unequivocal, and convincing” evidence in federal court.Historically, denaturalization has been rare. From 1990 to 2017, the United States averaged about 11 denaturalization cases per year. During President Trump’s first term, the government filed just over 100 cases across four years, compared with 24 cases under the Biden administration. In 2025, the Justice Department has pursued 13 cases, winning eight. Under the new guidance, however, USCIS would refer as many as 2,400 cases annually, a scale far exceeding past practice.Administration officials defend the move as a necessary step to protect the integrity of citizenship. USCIS spokesperson Matthew Tragesser said the agency’s “war on fraud” includes prioritizing denaturalization for individuals who lied or misrepresented themselves, particularly under prior administrations. Supporters also argue the government has long underenforced existing law. Critics, including former USCIS officials and immigrant rights advocates, warn that imposing numerical targets risks politicizing a grave legal remedy. Sarah Pierce, a former USCIS policy official, called the quotas “arbitrary numerical targets” that could turn a “serious and rare tool into a blunt instrument.” Amanda Baran, a former senior USCIS official under President Biden, said citizenship is “too precious and fundamental to our democracy” to be treated with an enforcement metric.Civil liberties groups have raised concerns that quotas could lead to mistakes and overreach. Margy O’Herron of the Brennan Center for Justice warned that high-volume targets, similar to those seen in deportation efforts, could result in errors and generate fear among naturalized citizens. Immigration advocates also say the policy could have a chilling effect, creating a two-tier citizenship and reshaping how secure citizenship feels for millions of Americans born abroad. Go to Source

Hot this week

India makes satellite-based approaches using GAGAN for safer flights a reality

Photo credit: Airbus NEW DELHI: In a major safety-enhancement move, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) on Thursday got a “satellite-based landing system (SLS)” approach conducted for the first time on a jet engine airc Read More

PM Modi leaves for Seychelles after 11 years: What’s on agenda during three day visit?

PM Modi leaves for Seychelles (PM Modi X) Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday departed for Seychelles for a three-day visit centred on participating in the island nation’s Golden Jubilee National Day celebrations. Read More

Donald Trump to visit India ‘early next year’, says US secretary of state Marco Rubio

Trump likely to visit India next year, says Rubio (File photo: AP) US secretary of state Marco Rubio on Saturday said the Donald Trump administration is working towards an India visit by the US president “sometime early next Read More

Kristen Stewart, Alia Shawkat join hands for ‘The Wrong Girls’

Dylan Meyer teases upcoming project ‘The Wrong Girls’ and shares how the film came to be. Read More

Simbu wraps major ‘Arasan’ shoot after night schedule

Picture Credit: Instagram Actor Silambarasan, popularly known as Simbu, has shared an update about his upcoming film ‘Arasan’. Read More

Topics

India makes satellite-based approaches using GAGAN for safer flights a reality

Photo credit: Airbus NEW DELHI: In a major safety-enhancement move, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) on Thursday got a “satellite-based landing system (SLS)” approach conducted for the first time on a jet engine airc Read More

PM Modi leaves for Seychelles after 11 years: What’s on agenda during three day visit?

PM Modi leaves for Seychelles (PM Modi X) Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday departed for Seychelles for a three-day visit centred on participating in the island nation’s Golden Jubilee National Day celebrations. Read More

Donald Trump to visit India ‘early next year’, says US secretary of state Marco Rubio

Trump likely to visit India next year, says Rubio (File photo: AP) US secretary of state Marco Rubio on Saturday said the Donald Trump administration is working towards an India visit by the US president “sometime early next Read More

Kristen Stewart, Alia Shawkat join hands for ‘The Wrong Girls’

Dylan Meyer teases upcoming project ‘The Wrong Girls’ and shares how the film came to be. Read More

Simbu wraps major ‘Arasan’ shoot after night schedule

Picture Credit: Instagram Actor Silambarasan, popularly known as Simbu, has shared an update about his upcoming film ‘Arasan’. Read More

Veteran filmmaker K. Bhagyaraj passes away at 73 due to cardiac arrest

Veteran actor-writer-director K. Bhagyaraj passed away at the age of 73 on June 27, leaving the Tamil film industry in mourning. K. Bhagyaraj is one of Tamil cinema’s best screenplay writers and had a great career. Read More

Salman Khan’s next with Vamsi to wrap by October

Picture Credit: X Bollywood superstar Salman Khan is currently working with Tollywood director Vamsi Paidipally and filmmaker Dil Raju for an upcoming action entertainer tentatively called ‘SVC63’ opposite Nayanthara. Read More

Angelina Jolie prepares for trial after setback in Brad Pitt winery case

Angelina Jolie is preparing for trial next year after Brad Pitt secured a legal victory in their ongoing dispute over the sale of Château Miraval, with both sides remaining firm in their positions. Read More

Related Articles