Trump administration plans quota for denaturalizing citizens

The Trump administration is pushing to set a monthly quota for denaturalizing naturalized American citizens, targeting 100 to 200 cases in 2026. This initiative aims to accelerate the removal of individuals accused of fraud in their naturalization process. Critics warn it could create widespread fear among immigrants.

The Trump administration has circulated a document to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) outlining plans to denaturalize between 100 and 200 naturalized citizens each month starting in 2026. The proposal calls for collaboration with the Department of Justice to achieve this target, focusing on those who allegedly lied or misrepresented facts during naturalization. Although the administration has pursued denaturalizations before, this quota system marks a new approach.

USCIS spokesman Matthew J. Tragesser emphasized that the priority is on cases involving proven misrepresentation. The document, first reported by The New York Times, reflects broader efforts to address unlawful citizenships. In June, the Department of Justice issued guidance to prioritize such actions, building on tools developed under President Barack Obama to detect fraud.

Historically, denaturalization has been rare, often applied to war criminals like Nazis who concealed their pasts, according to Elizabeth Taufa of the Immigrant Legal Resource Center in San Francisco. During Trump's first term, only about 170 cases reached courts, per an analysis by Hofstra University's National Immigration Forum.

Taufa described meeting the proposed quota as a 'Herculean undertaking,' potentially requiring corner-cutting and disregarding legal precedents. She highlighted the 'chilling effect' these policies create, instilling fear in naturalized citizens and those eligible to apply. Immigration experts and advocates anticipate legal challenges to these plans.

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Illustration depicting USCIS immigration backlog with massive paperwork stacks and waiting applicants outside agency headquarters.
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USCIS pending caseload nears 12 million as processing slows, NPR analysis finds

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Nearly 12 million applications for immigration benefits were awaiting action at U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services by the end of September 2025, including 11.6 million in USCIS’ backlog and 247,974 unopened filings in a separate “frontlog,” according to an NPR review of USCIS data. NPR reported the backlog grew by about 2 million in the first year of President Trump’s second term, a faster rise than during his entire first term, leaving more applicants without timely proof their filings were received.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said the Trump administration is making it a “top priority” to remove people living in the United States illegally or through fraudulent means, including some with ties to the Iranian government, after the State Department said two relatives of slain Iranian commander Qasem Soleimani were taken into ICE custody for deportation proceedings.

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The administration of US President Donald Trump is weighing an increase in the annual refugee limit to admit more white South Africans, according to officials and sources familiar with the discussions. This would more than double the current cap of 7,500. The move prioritizes Afrikaners amid claims of persecution, which South Africa's government denies.

U.S. District Judge Brian E. Murphy of Massachusetts, an appointee of former President Joe Biden, ruled on February 25, 2026, that the Trump administration’s policy of deporting some immigrants to countries other than their own is unlawful because it does not provide sufficient due process protections, including meaningful notice and an opportunity to raise fears of persecution or torture.

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President Donald Trump is advocating for the SAVE Act, which requires proof of citizenship to register to vote, and threatening an executive order to impose stricter voting rules. These measures, tied to claims of foreign election interference, could complicate registration and voting for the 2026 midterms. Election law expert Rick Hasen warns they would disenfranchise millions without addressing actual fraud.

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