logo
As Deportation Target Widens, College-Educated Undocumented Grow More Fearful

As Deportation Target Widens, College-Educated Undocumented Grow More Fearful

Yahoo13-05-2025

Brian knew when he graduated from high school in 2013 that he couldn't afford a bachelor's on his own. Undocumented and unable to qualify for federal financial aid, he decided to enroll at community college and chip away at his associate degree a couple of classes at a time, using the money he earned as a deejay.
Brian came to the United States from Mexico when he was just 2 years old. He had no idea how he would pay for a four-year degree until he won a scholarship designed for students like him. A business management major, he graduated from Northeastern Illinois University in 2020 and now lives in Virginia, where he works in education policy and also owns several rental properties.
Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for The 74 Newsletter
'I always pushed myself, but the biggest push of all came from my parents,' said Brian, a lawful permanent resident who asked to be identified by his first name only for fear he could be targeted for removal by the Trump administration. 'They would ask us to pursue our education because that's why they came here. They wanted us to make a better life than what they were able to.'
College graduates like Brian with temporary immigration statuses might not be the primary focus of President Donald Trump's aggressive deportation effort, but they are no less alarmed by the forced removal of those with similar vulnerability.
Much of the nation's attention has fallen on undocumented laborers — an Episcopal bishop pleaded with Trump at the National Prayer Service in January to show mercy to 'the people who pick our crops and clean our office buildings, who labor in poultry farms and meatpacking plants, who wash the dishes after we eat in restaurants, and work the night shifts in hospitals' —but the administration's deportation scope is widening and has grown to ensnare those on college campuses.
More than 1.7 million of the nation's 11 million undocumented immigrants have earned at least a bachelor's degree, according to a 2022 report from the Center for Migration Studies of New York. Ernesto Castañeda, director of the Center for Latin American and Latino Studies and the Immigration Lab at American University, said many people underestimate this group's educational attainment.
Most don't know some immigrants are more credentialed than Americans upon arrival, he said. For example, 48% of Venezuelan newcomers ages 25 or older reported having a bachelor's degree or higher in 2023 compared to 36% of U.S.-born Americans, according to the Migration Policy Institute. Deporting this population would mean an enormous drain of 'brain and brawn,' Castañeda said.
'If we expel those people, there would be a big economic loss — and a loss of decades of innovation and scientific discovery, as well as in arts and culture,' he said.
While Trump's immigrant policies have been cited for making it more difficult to fill agricultural, construction and hospitality jobs, it will also shrink the nation's pool of highly skilled workers, said Prerna Arora, associate professor of psychology and education at Columbia University's Teachers College.
Related
'Do we have the necessary workforce to complete the things that we need done, especially in a modernizing society?' she asked. 'So many of these [college-educated, undocumented] people — and this is what happens across fields — want to go back and help communities from which they are a part.'
More than 408,000 undocumented students were enrolled in U.S. colleges and universities in 2023, representing 1.9% of all college students. The figure was higher pre-pandemic when it stood at 427,000 in 2019. The American Immigration Council attributes some of the decline to COVID and ongoing legal challenges to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, the Obama-era program that gave temporary deportation relief to hundreds of thousands of immigrants brought to the U.S. as children, allowing them to study and work.
One Florida lawmaker now seeks to bar the undocumented from state colleges and universities entirely: they've already lost access to in-state tuition there. Texas is considering a similar measure.
Trump has made higher education a key focus of his immigration enforcement actions, targeting international students — many because of their political speech or protest actions around the war in Gaza. Thousands have lost their F-1 or J-1 student status as part of his crackdown, though the administration recently reversed those revocations in the face of court challenges.
Still, these international students' future remains unclear. They are increasingly looking toward other countries as Trump continues to raid dorms, pull students off the street and place them in detention centers far from home.
Another academic, a 32-year-old woman from Senegal, who has lawful permanent resident status but asked that her name be withheld because she fears the current administration, called these removals heartbreaking and unjust.
'We should be investing and supporting young people, not criminalizing them,' said the woman, who came to the United States with her family at age 7.
She grew up in Harlem and scored high enough on the selective admissions exam to be accepted to Brooklyn Technical, one of New York City's premier public high schools. A law and society major, she graduated from Brooklyn Tech in 2011.
It was an enormous accomplishment. Her father had no formal schooling in his home country and her mother attended only through the ninth grade. Their daughter has a master's degree.
'My life and achievements are proof of what results when we make these investments,' she said. 'So apart from the devastating impact these actions have on these young people's lives, these actions harm communities — and all of us as a country.'
Roughly 88% of undocumented higher ed students are enrolled as undergraduates and 12% are in graduate or professional schools. Forty-five percent are Hispanic, 24.9% are Asian, 15.2% are Black and 10.8% are white, according to the Higher Ed Immigration Portal, which based its findings on data from a one-year sample of the 2022 American Community Survey.
California, Texas, Florida, New York and New Jersey make up the top five states with the most undocumented higher education students. More than 27% of undocumented graduate students nationally earned their undergraduate degree in a STEM field.
David Blancas, 37, got his bachelor's degree in secondary education and mathematics at Illinois' Aurora University in 2009 — he was a stellar student and won a scholarship that covered most of the cost — and worked as a math teacher in Chicago public schools for five years.
He got his master's in urban education from National Louis University in Chicago in 2013 — also funded by grants and scholarships — and currently works in a leadership role at an organization that helps renters become homeowners through counseling and financial assistance.
Like Brian, Blancas, born in Mexico, came to the United States as a toddler. His father arrived in Chicago first to secure a job — as a busboy and then a cook — and an apartment before his wife and children joined him.
Blancas is the first in his family to graduate from college: His mother dropped out of school before eighth grade and his father stopped attending by ninth grade.
But they always prized education.
'They loved school,' Blancas said. 'They constantly talked about how they were good at it and how they were very sad that they couldn't continue because of financial reasons. To them, education was like the biggest thing.'
Related
The Senegalese-born scholar said the same, despite the obstacles she faced: She wasn't aware of her citizenship status until she was told that she needed a Social Security number to fill out the federal financial aid form for college and found out she didn't have one. Thankfully, she said, she was accepted by DACA and went on to earn her bachelor's degree in political science and economics from Hunter College in 2015.
She worked 35 hours a week in a retail store to cover her tuition and soon joined Teach for America, which recruits college graduates to serve in high-need schools. She paid for her master's at the Relay Graduate School of Education out-of-pocket with her teaching salary. She eventually became an assistant principal and now works in policy and advocacy for a national nonprofit aimed at helping schools better serve all students — including immigrants.
Local and state police around the country are assisting the Trump administration in its immigration enforcement and deportation push. Chicago, where Brian grew up, is a sanctuary city, one that has pledged by law not to cooperate in these efforts. The president has taken aim at these locations with Chicago its most prominent target: The Justice Department is suing the city and the state of Illinois for allegedly impeding its enforcement campaign.
Related
As a boy and a young man, Brian wanted to be a part of the Chicago Police Department and spent hours watching Law & Order SVU to get a sense of that life. He applied for a job there as soon as he earned his associate degree.
'That's when they told me they didn't accept DACA recipients,' he said. 'I was heartbroken. I did the physical, I did the mental exam and everything, and they did the vetting — they interviewed my neighbors and other people. It was a hard reality check. It was difficult for me to accept that.'
After the setback, he pushed on.
'It's not just about me or my family,' said Brian, who also works in education policy with an eye toward immigrant students. 'It's for my entire community — to break that stigma that undocumented immigrants are uneducated or that we're lazy or that we're just mooching off of the system. People don't know that for DACA, you have to go through a background check. You have to pay a fee, show that you're working, you're paying taxes, that you're going to school.'
It's frustrating to see people fighting to end the program, he said. Blancas, also allowed to work under DACA, agrees. He has a wife and two children and lives what he described as a typical middle-class life.
He said he understands America's desire to protect its border, to ensure entry to only those who will add to the economy. But that's exactly what they are getting from the very people they are trying to chase out, he argued.
'We have our own house,' Blancas said. 'We both have really great jobs that give back to the community. We're able to provide a great life for our children. We're living that suburban American life, which is amazing.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures rise after jobs report as Tesla jumps on Musk-Trump detente
Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures rise after jobs report as Tesla jumps on Musk-Trump detente

Yahoo

time16 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures rise after jobs report as Tesla jumps on Musk-Trump detente

US stock futures climbed on Friday following the release of a moderate beat on the monthly jobs report and rising investor hopes of a cooldown in the acrimonious feud between President Trump and Elon Musk. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures (YM=F) rose 0.7%, while those on the S&P 500 (ES=F) added 0.8%. Contracts on the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 (NQ=F) gained 0.9%. Tesla (TSLA) shares rose as CEO Musk and Trump moved to cool tensions. Musk backed off his threat to decommission the Dragon spacecraft used by NASA after Trump threatened his government contracts. However, the White House tamped down reports of a potential "peace call" between the two. Tesla shares had suffered a wipeout, down more than 14% in a broader stock slide on Thursday as mounting differences between the two powerful men erupted into the open. Musk called for the president's impeachment, while Trump threatened the contracts and breaks critical to Musk's business empire. The feud injected more unpredictability into an already uncertain market, just as weary investors had become cautiously optimistic that Trump tariffs could be reined in and the US economy might prove resilient. Read more: The latest on Trump's tariffs Meanwhile on Friday, the labor market showed more signs of resilience as Trump's tariffs continued to seep in to the economy. The US added 139,000 jobs in May, more than the 126,000 expected by economists, as the hiring rate slowed and unemployment held flat at 4.2%. The report comes amid signs of "paralysis" in the US economy amid uncertainty over Trump's tariff policy. Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer reports: Read more here. Circle (CRCL) stock continued to gain in premarket trading Friday after an explosive debut on the public markets Thursday. Shares of the stablecoin issuer rose 14% to trade around $94 as of 8:00 a.m. ET Friday. On Thursday, the stock soared 168% from its IPO price of $31, closing the session with a market capitalization north of $16 billion. Circle is the second-largest stablecoin issuer in the market and issues the stablecoin USDC (USDC-USD), which is backed by the dollar. There is $60 billion worth of USDC in circulation, while the largest stablecoin issuer, Tether (USDT-USD), has closer to $150 billion in circulation. Its market debut comes as multiple tailwinds have boosted the crypto market in recent months. Bitcoin (BTC-USD) breached the $100,000 level in early May and is currently trading around $103,800 per token. Read more about Circle's IPO here. Earnings: No notable earnings releases. Economic data: Nonfarm payrolls (May) Unemployment rate (May); Average hourly earnings (May); Average weekly hours worked (May); Labor force participation rate (May) Here are some of the biggest stories you may have missed overnight and early this morning: All eyes on May jobs report for signs of further cracks Musk offers olive branch to Trump after bitter feud erupts Why investors are already skipping ahead to July's jobs report Tesla stock rises as investors cheer Musk-Trump peace call Gold's cheaper precious metals peers surge to multi-year highs BofA's Hartnett: Global stocks are close to triggering 'sell' signal Xi bets taking Trump's call will lead to wins on chips, tariffs Lululemon said its profits will take a hit as uncertainty around tariffs deters shoppers, prompting the yogawear retailer to lower its 2025 forecast. Shares sank over 20% in pre-market trading in the wake of Lululemon's earnings report late Thursday. Yahoo Finance's Brooke DiPalma reports: Read more here. Here are some top stocks trending on Yahoo Finance in premarket trading: Broadcom (AVGO) stock fell 3% in premarket trading on Friday, after the tech company, which makes semiconductors, failed to impress Wall Street with it's third-quarter revenue forecast. Despite investors being bullish on chip stocks amid the artificial intelligence boom, the results failed to excite. "High expectations drove a bit of downside," Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon said in a note. Tesla (TSLA) stock rebounded on Friday and rose 4% in premarket trading after closing 14% down the day before. The war of words between CEO Elon Musk and President Trump cooled amid a report that White House officials were organising a call between the two leaders. lululemon athletica inc. (LULU) shares plunged 20% on Friday before the bell after the sports company warned profits would be hit amid what it called a "dynamic macro-environment." DocuSign (DOCU) stock fell 18% in premarket trading on Friday after reporting a rise in its profit and revenue, however, the company now expects to bring in less money from company contracts. Tesla (TSLA) shares rose before the bell, setting up for a comeback from tanking 14% on Thursday as the public spat between its CEO Elon Musk and President Trump became increasingly heated. Investors are taking some comfort from White House aides scheduling a call between Musk and Trump to broker peace, as the Tesla boss signals he's open to moves to cool the situation. Reuters reports: Read more here. Elon Musk has taken back his threat to decommission the Dragon spacecraft, currently produced by SpaceX and used for ferrying people and essential items to the International Space Station. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Lululemon (LULU) Shares in the apparel company plunged 21.7% after the company issued weaker-than-expected guidance for the second quarter and claimed profits are at risk in a "dynamic macro-environment". The brand expects Q2 earnings per share in the range of $2.85 to $2.90, significantly below Wall Street's consensus estimate of $3.29. DocuSign (DOCU) DocuSign stock dropped 16.9% in after-hours trading following a miss on billings growth. The digital agreements company reported Q1 billings of $739.6 million, falling short of the $746.2 million consensus from analysts. Samsara (IOT) Shares in the software company plunged 12.5% despite beating earnings expectations after Samsara issued guidance that pointed to slowing revenue growth. For the fiscal second quarter, the company expects revenue between $371 million and $373 million, up from $367 million in the previous quarter. Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer reports: Read more here. Circle (CRCL) stock continued to gain in premarket trading Friday after an explosive debut on the public markets Thursday. Shares of the stablecoin issuer rose 14% to trade around $94 as of 8:00 a.m. ET Friday. On Thursday, the stock soared 168% from its IPO price of $31, closing the session with a market capitalization north of $16 billion. Circle is the second-largest stablecoin issuer in the market and issues the stablecoin USDC (USDC-USD), which is backed by the dollar. There is $60 billion worth of USDC in circulation, while the largest stablecoin issuer, Tether (USDT-USD), has closer to $150 billion in circulation. Its market debut comes as multiple tailwinds have boosted the crypto market in recent months. Bitcoin (BTC-USD) breached the $100,000 level in early May and is currently trading around $103,800 per token. Read more about Circle's IPO here. Earnings: No notable earnings releases. Economic data: Nonfarm payrolls (May) Unemployment rate (May); Average hourly earnings (May); Average weekly hours worked (May); Labor force participation rate (May) Here are some of the biggest stories you may have missed overnight and early this morning: All eyes on May jobs report for signs of further cracks Musk offers olive branch to Trump after bitter feud erupts Why investors are already skipping ahead to July's jobs report Tesla stock rises as investors cheer Musk-Trump peace call Gold's cheaper precious metals peers surge to multi-year highs BofA's Hartnett: Global stocks are close to triggering 'sell' signal Xi bets taking Trump's call will lead to wins on chips, tariffs Lululemon said its profits will take a hit as uncertainty around tariffs deters shoppers, prompting the yogawear retailer to lower its 2025 forecast. Shares sank over 20% in pre-market trading in the wake of Lululemon's earnings report late Thursday. Yahoo Finance's Brooke DiPalma reports: Read more here. Here are some top stocks trending on Yahoo Finance in premarket trading: Broadcom (AVGO) stock fell 3% in premarket trading on Friday, after the tech company, which makes semiconductors, failed to impress Wall Street with it's third-quarter revenue forecast. Despite investors being bullish on chip stocks amid the artificial intelligence boom, the results failed to excite. "High expectations drove a bit of downside," Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon said in a note. Tesla (TSLA) stock rebounded on Friday and rose 4% in premarket trading after closing 14% down the day before. The war of words between CEO Elon Musk and President Trump cooled amid a report that White House officials were organising a call between the two leaders. lululemon athletica inc. (LULU) shares plunged 20% on Friday before the bell after the sports company warned profits would be hit amid what it called a "dynamic macro-environment." DocuSign (DOCU) stock fell 18% in premarket trading on Friday after reporting a rise in its profit and revenue, however, the company now expects to bring in less money from company contracts. Tesla (TSLA) shares rose before the bell, setting up for a comeback from tanking 14% on Thursday as the public spat between its CEO Elon Musk and President Trump became increasingly heated. Investors are taking some comfort from White House aides scheduling a call between Musk and Trump to broker peace, as the Tesla boss signals he's open to moves to cool the situation. Reuters reports: Read more here. Elon Musk has taken back his threat to decommission the Dragon spacecraft, currently produced by SpaceX and used for ferrying people and essential items to the International Space Station. Bloomberg reports: Read more here. Lululemon (LULU) Shares in the apparel company plunged 21.7% after the company issued weaker-than-expected guidance for the second quarter and claimed profits are at risk in a "dynamic macro-environment". The brand expects Q2 earnings per share in the range of $2.85 to $2.90, significantly below Wall Street's consensus estimate of $3.29. DocuSign (DOCU) DocuSign stock dropped 16.9% in after-hours trading following a miss on billings growth. The digital agreements company reported Q1 billings of $739.6 million, falling short of the $746.2 million consensus from analysts. Samsara (IOT) Shares in the software company plunged 12.5% despite beating earnings expectations after Samsara issued guidance that pointed to slowing revenue growth. For the fiscal second quarter, the company expects revenue between $371 million and $373 million, up from $367 million in the previous quarter. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Judge temporarily halts Trump's proclamation blocking Harvard students' visas
Judge temporarily halts Trump's proclamation blocking Harvard students' visas

Yahoo

time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Judge temporarily halts Trump's proclamation blocking Harvard students' visas

A federal judge late Thursday temporarily blocked President Trump's proclamation that blocks visas for foreign students planning to attend Harvard University until after a hearing later this month. U.S. District Judge Allison Burroughs's order came swiftly after Harvard rushed to court to ask the judge to immediately block Trump's proclamation, which he signed a day earlier. Burroughs issued her order before the government responded, saying the school would otherwise 'sustain immediate and irreparable injury before there is an opportunity to hear from all parties.' The judge, an appointee of former President Obama who serves in Boston, said she would hold a June 16 hearing on whether to block Trump's proclamation indefinitely. Trump's proclamation marked a shift in the administration's expanding battle with the Ivy League School over its refusal to comply with a list of demands, which include changes to its admissions and hiring policies and a stronger stance against antisemitism. Harvard first sued the administration in April for freezing more than $2 billion in federal funding. It filed a second lawsuit last month after the Department of Homeland Security revoked its certification to admit foreign students. The development prompted the school to seek emergency relief, quickly convincing Burroughs to block the revocation as the case proceeds. Harvard amended the second lawsuit on Thursday after Trump signed the new proclamation, urging Burroughs to immediately block it and accusing the president of circumventing the earlier order. 'The Proclamation simply reflects the Administration's effort to accomplish the very result that the Court sought to prevent. The Court should not stand for that,' the school's legal team wrote in court filings. Trump's proclamation cites a federal law authorizing the president to suspend entry of a group of noncitizens whose entry would be detrimental to national interests. 'In my judgment, Harvard's conduct has rendered it an unsuitable destination for foreign students and researchers,' the proclamation states. 'Until such time as the university shares the information that the Federal Government requires to safeguard national security and the American public, it is in the national interest to deny foreign nationals access to Harvard under the auspices of educational exchange,' it continues. 'This lawsuit seeks to kneecap the President's constitutionally vested powers under Article II,' assistant DHS secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement to The Hill about Harvard's lawsuit. 'It is a privilege, not a right, for universities to enroll foreign students and benefit from their higher tuition payments to help pad their multibillion-dollar endowments. The Trump administration is committed to restoring common sense to our student visa system; no lawsuit, this or any other, is going to change that. We have the law, the facts, and common sense on our side.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

US, Chinese officials exchange barbs at Shanghai event over trade
US, Chinese officials exchange barbs at Shanghai event over trade

Yahoo

time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

US, Chinese officials exchange barbs at Shanghai event over trade

By Casey Hall SHANGHAI (Reuters) -U.S. and Chinese officials traded barbs at a celebration held by a U.S. business chamber in Shanghai on Friday, as the chamber appealed to both countries to provide more certainty to American businesses operating in China. Scott Walker, consul general of U.S. consulate in Shanghai, told a gathering of U.S. businesses aimed at celebrating the 110th anniversary of the American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) in Shanghai that the U.S.-China economic relationship had been unbalanced and non-reciprocal "for far too long." "We want an end to discriminatory actions and retaliation against U.S. companies in China," he said. In a speech that directly followed Walker's, Chen Jing, a Shanghai Communist Party official who is also the president of the Shanghai People's Association for Friendship with Foreign Countries, countered Walker's view. "I believe the consul general's view is prejudiced, ungrounded and not aligning with the phone call of our heads of states last night," he said. The interaction reflects the continued strained relationship between both countries as the trade war continues to simmer. U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping spoke over a long anticipated call on Thursday, confronting weeks of brewing trade tensions and a battle over critical minerals. Trump later said they agreed to further talks. It came in the middle of a dispute between Washington and Beijing in recent weeks over "rare earths" minerals that threatened to tear up a fragile truce in the trade war between the two biggest economies. The countries struck a 90-day deal on May 12 to roll back some of the triple-digit, tit-for-tat tariffs they had placed on each other since Trump's January inauguration but the deal has not addressed broader concerns that strain the relationship and Trump has accused China of violating the agreement. Eric Zheng, president of AmCham Shanghai which counts over 1,000 companies among its membership, told reporters on the sidelines of the event that many companies had put their decision-making on pause due to the uncertainty. "People are looking for some more definitive, durable statements on both sides that enable businesses to feel more secure," he said. "Our number one ask from the two governments is to give us some certainty so that we can plan accordingly." Erreur lors de la récupération des données Connectez-vous pour accéder à votre portefeuille Erreur lors de la récupération des données Erreur lors de la récupération des données Erreur lors de la récupération des données Erreur lors de la récupération des données

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store