logo
Immigrants seeking lawful work and citizenship are now subject to 'anti-Americanism' screening

Immigrants seeking lawful work and citizenship are now subject to 'anti-Americanism' screening

Independent17 hours ago
Immigrants seeking a legal pathway to live and work in the United States will now be subject to screening for 'anti-Americanism',' authorities said Tuesday, raising concerns among critics that it gives officers too much leeway in rejecting foreigners based on a subjective judgment.
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services said officers will now consider whether an applicant for benefits, such as a green card, 'endorsed, promoted, supported, or otherwise espoused" anti-American, terrorist or antisemitic views.
'America's benefits should not be given to those who despise the country and promote anti-American ideologies,' Matthew Tragesser, USCIS spokesman, said in a statement. 'Immigration benefits—including to live and work in the United States—remain a privilege, not a right.'
It isn't specified what constitutes anti-Americanism and it isn't clear how and when the directive would be applied.
'The message is that the U.S. and immigration agencies are going to be less tolerant of anti-Americanism or antisemitism when making immigration decisions," Elizabeth Jacobs, director of regulatory affairs and policy at the Center for Immigration Studies, a group that advocates for immigration restrictions, said on Tuesday.
Jacobs said the government is being more explicit in the kind of behaviors and practices officers should consider, but emphasized that discretion is still in place. "The agency cannot tell officers that they have to deny — just to consider it as a negative discretion,' she said.
Critics worry the policy update will allow for more subjective views of what is considered anti-American and allow an officer's personal bias to cloud his or her judgment.
'For me, the really big story is they are opening the door for stereotypes and prejudice and implicit bias to take the wheel in these decisions. That's really worrisome," said Jane Lilly Lopez, associate professor of sociology at Brigham Young University.
The policy changes follow others recently implemented since the start of the Trump administration including social media vetting and the most recent addition of assessing applicants seeking naturalization for 'good moral character'. That will not only consider 'not simply the absence of misconduct' but also factor the applicant's positive attributes and contributions.
'It means you are going to just do a whole lot more work to provide evidence that you meet our standards,' Lopez said.
Experts disagree on the constitutionality of the policy involving people who are not U.S. citizens and their freedom of speech. Jacobs, of the Center for Immigration Studies, said First Amendment rights do not extend to people outside the U.S. or who are not U.S. citizens.
Ruby Robinson, senior managing attorney with the Michigan Immigrant Rights Center, believes the Bill of Rights and the U.S. Constitution protects all people in the United States, regardless of their immigration status, against government encroachment. 'A lot of this administration's activities infringe on constitutional rights and do need to be resolved, ultimately, in courts,' Robinson added.
Attorneys are advising clients to adjust their expectations.
' People need to understand that we have a different system today and a lot more things that apply to U.S. citizens are not going to apply to somebody who's trying to enter the United States," said Jaime Diez, an immigration attorney based in Brownsville, Texas.
Jonathan Grode, managing partner of Green and Spiegel immigration law firm, said the policy update was not unexpected considering how the Trump administration approaches immigration.
'This is what was elected. They're allowed to interpret the rules the way they want,' Grode said. 'The policy always to them is to shrink the strike zone. The law is still the same.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump set to bar college graduates from debt relief program if employers undermine ‘American values'
Trump set to bar college graduates from debt relief program if employers undermine ‘American values'

The Independent

time4 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Trump set to bar college graduates from debt relief program if employers undermine ‘American values'

Donald Trump 's administration is considering introducing a new rule that would block college graduates with outstanding loans from having their debt forgiven if their employers are found to be 'undermining national security and American values through illegal means.' The proposal, announced this week by the Linda McMahon -led Department for Education, would bar people from being considered for the federal Public Student Loan Forgiveness program if the businesses they work for engage in 'activities with a substantial illegal purpose.' The examples given by the DOE of what offenses might qualify include 'supporting terrorism, aiding or abetting discrimination or violations of immigration laws, or child abuse.' Announcing the draft rule change proposal, Under Secretary of Education Nicholas Kent said: 'President Trump has given the department a historic mandate to restore the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program to its original purpose – supporting public servants who strengthen their communities and serve the public good, not benefiting businesses engaged in illegal activity that harm Americans. 'The federal government has a vital interest in deterring unlawful conduct, and we're moving quickly to ensure employers don't benefit while breaking the law.' The PSLF was first introduced in 2007 under George W Bush with the intention of rewarding graduates who enter public service professions like teaching or law enforcement by relieving them of the burden of student debt at the outset of their careers. The DOE insists the rule change it is pitching is necessary to preserve the original spirit of the taxpayer-funded program while penalizing companies found to be operating outside of the law. It is now soliciting public comments on its proposal until September 17. According to CBS News, critics of the revision have already warned that it would open the door to DOE officials moving to 'improperly exclude' public servants from the scheme on ideological grounds. In advance of the draft proposal being published, the Student Borrower Protection Center campaign group slammed it last month as 'harmful, horrific, and illegal,' warning it could empower the Trump administration to persecute agencies and firms whose work or ethos conflicts with its own goals. 'To be clear, if implemented this proposal would allow the secretary to disqualify from PSLF any employees of school systems that accurately teach the U.S.'s history of slavery, of healthcare providers who offer gender-affirming care and of legal aid organizations that represent individuals against unlawful deportations,' said the SBPC's legal director Winston Berkman-Breen in late June. The Independent has reached out to the DOE for further comment. Earlier this month, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem offered student loan forgiveness as an incentive to encourage graduates to apply to join ICE as part of a massive recruitment drive to boost the administration's crackdown on undocumented migrants.

ICE deports 6-year-old girl and her mom to Ecuador as New York officials blast Trump: ‘Where is your humanity?'
ICE deports 6-year-old girl and her mom to Ecuador as New York officials blast Trump: ‘Where is your humanity?'

The Independent

time4 minutes ago

  • The Independent

ICE deports 6-year-old girl and her mom to Ecuador as New York officials blast Trump: ‘Where is your humanity?'

A six-year-old girl and her mother, who were seeking asylum in the United States, have been deported to Ecuador after being arrested in New York City and held in immigration detention for a week. The second-grade student went to an Immigration and Customs Enforcement check-in appointment with her mother and older brother in lower Manhattan on August 12 when they were detained by federal agents. New York officials confirmed that the young girl and her mother, who had been living in Queens, were deported on Tuesday morning. The girl's 19-year-old brother is still locked up in an immigration detention center in New Jersey. The case of another New York City public school student being targeted has drawn renewed scrutiny and outrage over the practice of arresting immigrants at routine check-in appointments and court hearings. The child's arrest appears to be the first known ICE arrest of a New Yorker under the age of 18 during Donald Trump's administration. 'This is cruel. And I say to those who did this: 'where is your humanity?'' NY Governor Kathy Hochul said in a statement after the family was deported. 'President Trump, you said you were going after the 'worst of the worst.' You think she's really the 'worst of the worst?'' she said. 'I want to demand how you can possibly say yes.' The Independent has requested comment from the Department of Homeland Security. In a previous statement, assistant secretary Tricia McLaughlin said the family had final orders for their removal and encouraged undocumented immigrants to self-deport. 'If not, you will be arrested and deported without a chance to return,' she said. The Ecuadorian family sought asylum without legal permission after arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border in December 2022. The woman, identified as Martha, had her asylum claims denied last year, but continued to attend ICE check-ins without issue. Her child had attended P.S. 89 elementary school in Queens. In a letter to ICE pleading for the girl's release, the school's principal called her 'a kind, respectful, and dedicated young lady' whose 'unexpected removal will cause significant disruption to her learning and will likely have a deep emotional impact on her classmates and our entire school community.' Last week, the family was arrested during a check-in appointment at 26 Federal Plaza in lower Manhattan, home to ICE officers, immigration courts and a makeshift detention facility at the center of a federal lawsuit over its conditions. Martha's 19-year-old son was sent to that holding center, and then moved to Delaney Hall in Newark. ICE's online detainee locator system had previously shown that Martha was being held inside one of the country's few family detention centers in Texas. The system then noted she was in Washington, D.C., on Monday. The system no longer has a record of her whereabouts. 'There is no greater depravity than separating a family and deporting a 6 year-old child two weeks before she is supposed to start school,' read a joint statement from NY state Assemblymember Catalina Cruz and New York City Council Member Shekar Krishnan. 'It is a shameful stain on our country's history and conscience,' they added. Protesters have railed against the targeting of New York City students in recent weeks, following a wave of arrests at courthouses and ICE check-ins, with Manhattan fast becoming the nation's capital for such arrests. In June and July, agents with ICE's New York City field office arrested 48 children, according to data shared with news organization The City, compiled by the Deportation Data Project. Dylan Lopez Contreras, a 20-year-old student from Venezuela, was enrolled at Ellis Prep. Academy in the Bronx, part of the public school system's programs serving older immigrants learning English. He was arrested in May immediately after his appearance in immigration court on his asylum claims. Earlier this month, advocates rallied for the release of Mamadou Mouctar Diallo, who was enrolled at Brooklyn Frontiers High School, a transfer school that serves many older immigrant students. Diallo, who is originally from Guinea, was at least the third public school student arrested by ICE agents this year, according to city officials and attorneys for their families. He is currently detained at Pike County Correctional Facility in Pennsylvania, according to ICE records. As schools prepare for the upcoming year, communities across the U.S. are reeling as families are ripped apart by ICE arrests, and sent to countries their young children don't know. In Los Angeles, the county's school districts are putting new protective measures in place to brace for ICE raids, while New York officials are suing ICE to prevent courthouse arrests that have turned routine, legal appearances into what one judge has called ' deportation roulette.' An ICE policy — abandoned by the Trump administration — sought to prevent courthouse arrests from creating a 'palpable fear that disincentivizes people from appearing for their hearings,' according to a lawsuit filed by civil rights groups against the practice. 'But in the first few days of the Trump administration, defendants repealed those policies, exposing individuals who properly appear for their hearings, including to seek asylum and other relief, to the imminent threat of arrest and indefinite detention,' the lawsuit stated.

Macron: Why I had to sue US influencer Candace Owens
Macron: Why I had to sue US influencer Candace Owens

Times

time5 minutes ago

  • Times

Macron: Why I had to sue US influencer Candace Owens

President Macron said on Wednesday he was suing an American influencer who claims his wife Brigitte is a man to 'defend his honour'. Asked about his action for punitive damages against the hard-right political commentator Candace Owens, Macron, 47, said he was aware that he and Brigitte risked provoking a so-called Streisand effect — creating extra negative publicity by attempting to suppress it. 'They advised us not to sue,' he told Paris Match magazine. 'But it has taken on such magnitude in the United States that we had to act.' Candace Owens called the lawsuit 'goofy' OCTAVIO JONES/REUTERS Since last year, Owens, 36, whose YouTube channel has four million subscribers, has been promoting a five-year-old French conspiracy theory that Brigitte Macron, 72, was a man who changed gender. Since the Macrons' suit, Owens has intensified her claims , mocking the libel action as both 'goofy' and a 'vicious public relations' move aimed at silencing the truth. • French right try to unpick Macron's loan of Bayeux Tapestry to UK The Macrons decided that they had no choice, the president said. 'They're talking about the identity of the first lady of France, of a wife, mother and grandmother … It's a matter of defending my honour.' He took a swipe at the Trump administration, dismissing American claims that suits such as his were attempts to stifle free speech. 'Those who talk about this supposed freedom of speech are the people who ban journalists from the Oval Office. I don't accept that,' he said. The Macrons at Huis ten Bosch Palace in the Hague for the Nato summit on June 24 PATRICK VAN KATWIJK/GETTY IMAGES President Trump's staff have excluded several elements of the mainstream media, including the Associated Press, Reuters and Bloomberg, from certain White House events while granting access to right-wing influencers. JD Vance, the vice-president, has claimed that European governments are using laws to curb free speech. Owens 'knew very well that she was using false news to cause damage, in the service of an ideology and with established connections with the far right', Macron said. In the 22-count suit lodged in Delaware, the Macrons' US lawyers have sought a jury trial, seeking compensation and punitive damages for spreading 'verifiably false and devastating lies'. Owens has said she is 'fully prepared to take on this battle' and promised to fight in the courts. The lawsuit claims that Owens ignored repeated requests to retract her claims and continues to earn substantial sums of money with the false claims. No trial date has been set.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store