
President Trump banned citizens of 12 countries from entering the US. Here's what to know.
The ban announced Wednesday applies to citizens of Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, the Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. The heightened restrictions apply to people from Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela who are outside the U.S. and don't hold a valid visa.
The policy takes effect Monday at 12:01 a.m. and does not have an end date.
Here's what to know about the new rules:
Since returning to the White House, Trump has launched an unprecedented campaign of immigration enforcement that has pushed the limits of executive power and clashed with federal judgestrying to restrain him.
The travel ban stems from a Jan. 20 executive order Trump issued requiring the Department of State, Department of Homeland Security and the Director of National Intelligence to compile a report on 'hostile attitudes' toward the U.S.
The aim is to 'protect its citizens from aliens who intend to commit terrorist attacks, threaten our national security, espouse hateful ideology, or otherwise exploit the immigration laws for malevolent purposes,' the administration said.
In a video posted on social media, Trump tied the new ban to a terrorist attack Sunday in Boulder, Colorado, saying it underscored the dangers posed by some visitors who overstay visas. The man charged in the attack is from Egypt, a country that is not on Trump's restricted list. U.S. officials say he overstayed a tourist visa.
Trump said nationals of countries included in the ban pose 'terrorism-related' and 'public-safety' risks, as well as risks of overstaying their visas. He also said some of these countries had 'deficient' screening and vetting or have historically refused to take back their citizens.
His findings rely extensively on an annual Homeland Security report about tourists, businesspeople and students who overstay U.S. visas and arrive by air or sea, singling out countries with high percentages of nationals who remain after their visas expired.
'We don't want them,' Trump said.
The inclusion of Afghanistan angered some supporters who have worked to resettle its people. The ban makes exceptions for Afghans on special immigrant visas, who were generally the people who worked most closely with the U.S. government during the two-decade war there.
The list can be changed, the administration said in a document, if authorities in the designated countries make 'material improvements' to their own rules and procedures. New countries can be added 'as threats emerge around the world.'
Venezuela President Nicolás Maduro's government condemned the travel ban, characterizing it in a statement as a 'stigmatization and criminalization campaign' against Venezuelans, who have been targeted by the Trump administration's immigration crackdown.
Chad President Mahamat Deby Itno said his country would suspend visas for U.S. citizens in response to the ban.
Aid and refugee resettlement groups also denounced it.
'This policy is not about national security — it is about sowing division and vilifying communities that are seeking safety and opportunity in the United States,' said Abby Maxman, president of Oxfam America.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations, the nation's largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization, called the order 'unnecessary, overbroad and ideologically motivated.'
And the National Immigration Law Center said it was 'outraged' and that the ban is 'laced with unsubstantiated legal justifications.'
'The impact of this new ban will be deeply racialized, as it will effectively bar hundreds of millions of Black and Brown people from entering the United States,' the group said in a statement.
But reactions to the ban ran the gamut from anger to guarded relief and support.
In Haiti, radio stations received a flurry of calls Thursday from angry listeners, including many who said they were Haitians living in the U.S. and who accused Trump of being racist, noting that the people of many of the targeted countries are Black.
In Miami, restaurant owner Wilkinson Sejour said most of his employees and customers are from Haiti and that the ban will hurt his business in a 'domino effect.' He suggested that Haiti was targeted because most Haitians vote Democrat.
Jaylani Hussein, who heads CAIR's Minnesota chapter, said his compatriots in the Twin Cities' large Somali American community had been expecting Trump's order, but didn't know the details until its release.
'It's a lot better than maybe some of the worst fears of what we initially thought could come out. But it significantly impacts the Somali community, there's no way around it,' he said.
William Lopez, a 75-year-old property investor who arrived from Cuba in 1967, supports the travel ban.
'These are people that come but don't want to work, they support the Cuban government, they support communism,' Lopez said at a restaurant near Little Havana in Miami. 'What the Trump administration is doing is perfectly good.'
Early in Trump's first term, he issued an executive order banning travel to the U.S. by citizens of seven predominantly Muslim countries, including Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia and Yemen.
It was one of the most chaotic and confusing moments of his young presidency. Travelers from those nations were either barred from getting on flights to the U.S. or detained at U.S. airports after they landed. They included students and faculty, as well as businesspeople, tourists and people visiting friends and family.
The order, often referred to as the 'Muslim ban' or the 'travel ban,' was retooled amid legal challenges until a version was upheld by the Supreme Court in 2018.
The ban affected various categories of travelers and immigrants from Iran, Somalia, Yemen, Syria and Libya, plus North Koreans and some Venezuelan government officials and their families.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

a few seconds ago
Trump signs executive order bringing Presidential Fitness Test back to schools
President Donald Trump took questions about trade, interest rates after signing an executive order that would bring back the Presidential Fitness Test in public schools.


New York Times
a few seconds ago
- New York Times
Andrea Lucas Confirmed to Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
The Senate confirmed Andrea Lucas on Thursday for a renewed term as commissioner at the Equal Opportunity Commission, pushing forward the Trump administration's efforts to reshape the priorities of the nation's primary regulator of workplace discrimination. Ms. Lucas has been at the forefront of President Trump's war on diversity, equity and inclusion. Ms. Lucas, 39, was confirmed by a party-line vote of 52 to 45. She was first appointed as a commissioner to the E.E.O.C. in 2020 during the first Trump administration and was appointed acting chair in January. Ms. Lucas has moved swiftly to redirect the agency's focus to White House priorities, including scrutinizing D.E.I. programs and 'enforcing the binary nature of sex.' In doing so, she has upended the E.E.O.C.'s traditional role as a bipartisan agency focused on enforcing civil rights law in the workplace. 'In just a few short months as acting chair, Andrea Lucas has warped the mission of the E.E.O.C. beyond recognition and weaponized the agency,' said Senator Patty Murray, Democrat of Washington State and a vocal opponent of Ms. Lucas's confirmation. In March, the E.E.O.C. began questioning law firms over their D.E.I. policies, raising alarm among current and former agency employees who believe the commission is being used by Mr. Trump to seek retribution against law firms the president dislikes. The agency has also brought investigations against Ivy League universities, long targets of Mr. Trump, including Harvard and Columbia University. Last week, Columbia agreed to pay $21 million to settle the investigation. Under Ms. Lucas's direction, the agency has reversed its traditional enforcement of transgender discrimination claims, dismissing cases it had previously filed on behalf of transgender employees and withholding state funds to process transgender discrimination claims. On Tuesday, legal groups filed a lawsuit against the E.E.O.C., alleging that the agency unlawfully refused to enforce federal workplace protections for transgender employees. Some legal experts have argued that the agency's activities under Ms. Lucas, such as shading over references to sexual orientation and gender harassment on the E.E.O.C.'s harassment guidance, amount to policy changes that sit outside her authority without a quorum vote. The agency normally has five commissioners, but Mr. Trump fired two of the agency's Democratic commissioners in January. That has left it operating with only two of the three required commissioners for a quorum. 'She's acting outside the E.E.O.C. on procedure and rules, which require a majority vote of the commission to change policy documents like the harassment guidance,' said Maya Raghu, a director at the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, an advocacy group. While the confirmation secures Ms. Lucas another five-year commissioner term, she is still awaiting an appointment by the president from her position as acting chair to chair of the agency, which would formalize her leadership role.


Bloomberg
a few seconds ago
- Bloomberg
Trump Will Impose 39% Tariff Rate on Imports From Switzerland
President Donald Trump will impose a 39% levy on imports from Switzerland, according to an executive order he signed Thursday night. Switzerland was among the countries that have not yet finalized trade frameworks with the US before the Aug. 1 deadline for so-called reciprocal tariff rates to take effect.