Visa processing for immigrants from 75 nations frozen by Trump administration
Exterior of the U.S. Department of State Harry S. Truman Building, in Washington, D.C., in May 2024. (Official State Department photo by Linda D. Epstein)
WASHINGTON β The State Department announced Wednesday it would suspend all visa processing for immigrants hailing from 75 countries because they are deemed likely to need governmental assistance in the United States, known as a βpublic charge.βΒ
The State Department did not answer States Newsroomβs inquiry as to when the policy would take effect or a list of the 75 countries in question. The State Department, in a social media post, listed several that would be affected, including Somalia, Haiti, Iran and Eritrea.
βThe State Department will pause immigrant visa processing from 75 countries whose migrants take welfare from the American people at unacceptable rates,β the State Department wrote. βThe freeze will remain active until the U.S. can ensure that new immigrants will not extract wealth from the American people.β
It will take effect Jan. 21 and other countries affected include Afghanistan and Russia,Β according to The Associated Press.
The Department of Homeland Security in November published a notice for proposed rulemaking thatΒ outlined major changes to how immigration officials assess whether certain immigrants are likely to become a public charge and if that constitutes grounds forΒ inadmissibility, meaning a noncitizen would be ineligible for admission or adjustment of their immigration status.
During President Donald Trumpβs first administration, he tried to broaden the definition of public charge to include any immigrant who had received certain public benefits for more than 12 months in a 36-month period. The move was tied up in the courts.
One of the earliest federal immigration laws is anΒ 1882 law that barred the immigration of people to the U.S. if they were likely to become a public charge. The Clinton administration in 1999 formally defined public charge as those who were dependent on cash assistance, such as food assistance.Β