Trump Administration

Trump Administration

USCIS Ends Automatic Extensions for Most Work Permits, Placing Immigrant Workers and Employers in Limbo

USCIS Ends Automatic Extensions for Most Work Permits, Placing Immigrant Workers and Employers in Limbo

On October 30, 2025, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) issued an interim final rule that eliminates the automatic extension for thousands of people who filed to renew their lawful work permits. Previously, people who filed their work permit renewal requests on time would be given an automatic… Read More

USCIS Implements the H-1B Proclamation $100,000 Fee

USCIS Implements the H-1B Proclamation $100,000 Fee

Many U.S. employers and H-1B workers panicked when the Trump administration issued a proclamation on September 19, 2025, that appeared to require a $100,000 payment for a noncitizen to enter the United States with an H-1B visa after 12:01 am Eastern Time on September 21. Within 24 hours,… Read More

A Texas-Only DACA? Why This Imminent Ruling Could Upend National Policy

A Texas-Only DACA? Why This Imminent Ruling Could Upend National Policy

Tens of thousands of DACA recipients in Texas may soon be stripped of their ability to work in the U.S. lawfully—and the consequences won’t stop at the state line. In January 2025, the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals held that portions of a 2022 DACA regulation –… Read More

ICE Attorneys Increasingly Request Case Dismissals at Immigration Court Hearings—and Immigration Judges Grant Them on the Spot

ICE Attorneys Increasingly Request Case Dismissals at Immigration Court Hearings—and Immigration Judges Grant Them on the Spot

As part of the Trump administration’s larger efforts to carry out its mass deportation agenda, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) attorneys—who represent the government in removal proceedings—are increasingly asking immigration judges to dismiss noncitizens’ immigration court cases. Rolled out nationwide around May 20 in conjunction with… Read More

What a Government Shutdown Means for the Immigration System

What a Government Shutdown Means for the Immigration System

With weeks of failed negotiations, Congress has less than 12 hours to avert a possible government shutdown. Should government funding lapse on October 1 without a deal, the impact will be felt differently across the government agencies that play a role in the immigration system. Democratic members of… Read More

$100,000 H-1B Fee Causes Chaos, Likely Unaffordable for Many Companies

$100,000 H-1B Fee Causes Chaos, Likely Unaffordable for Many Companies

On Friday evening, September 19, 2025, a presidential proclamation panicked many U.S. businesses and H-1B workers who were outside the United States. As written, the proclamation prohibited the entry of noncitizens to the United States in H-1B status, after 12:01 am Eastern Time on September 21, 2025 (the deadline)… Read More

287(g) Agreements With ICE Threaten Welcoming Communities

287(g) Agreements With ICE Threaten Welcoming Communities

This month, during Welcoming Week, neighborhoods across the country hosted cultural events, shared meals, and created spaces where immigrants and long-time residents could connect. But just as communities were opening their doors, a rapidly expanding federal enforcement program threatens to slam them shut: 287(g) agreements. The program… Read More

Trump’s $100,000 Fee for H-1B Visas: What You Need to Know

Trump’s $100,000 Fee for H-1B Visas: What You Need to Know

President Donald Trump announced that his administration will impose a $100,000 fee on new H-1B visa petitions. The new fee went into effect as of September 21, 2025, and will greatly impact employers’ ability to secure the highly educated foreign workers who come to the United States on… Read More

The Fight Over In-State Tuition for Undocumented Students

The Fight Over In-State Tuition for Undocumented Students

For over 20 years, access to in-state tuition for all students, regardless of immigration status, has been a powerful lever of inclusion and opportunity across the United States. First pioneered by Texas in 2001 under Republican Governor Rick Perry, in-state tuition equity policies have allowed undocumented students who… Read More

Why Is It So Hard to Become a US Citizen?

Why Is It So Hard to Become a US Citizen?

“Why don’t they just get in line?” It’s a question often directed toward undocumented immigrants living in the United States, a pointed challenge on why someone didn’t come to the country “the right way.” The short answer: there is no “line” available for most immigrants. The pathway to… Read More

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