Filipino-Americans fear denaturalization under new USCIS quotas

Naturalized Filipinos, the third-largest group of new US citizens in 2024, are increasingly anxious about the Trump administration's denaturalization push. As USCIS implements monthly referral targets of 100-200 cases—detailed in prior coverage—lawyers urge safeguards against potential audits of past applications.

The Naturalization Certificate represents a hard-earned milestone for many Filipino families pursuing the American Dream. Yet, the Trump administration's new denaturalization initiative, which sets USCIS referral quotas of 100 to 200 cases monthly to the DOJ (as previously reported), is sparking widespread fear among this community.

Filipinos are particularly vulnerable: over 41,000 took the Oath of Allegiance in 2024 alone, and of the 2.1 million Philippine-born US residents, about 1.6 million (76%) are naturalized—the highest rate among major immigrant groups.

"Many of our kababayans are very fearful and are asking if they are covered," said San Francisco immigration lawyer Lou Tancinco. Common worries include past criminal convictions, immigration fraud, marital misrepresentations, or undisclosed children. Even minor errors like incorrect travel dates or incomplete job histories can trigger scrutiny, though only material lies affecting eligibility warrant revocation.

The 2017 Supreme Court case Maslenjak v. US protects against denaturalization for trivial falsehoods. Tancinco stresses: "USCIS cannot simply revoke citizenship." Naturalized citizens are entitled to a federal court hearing, with the burden on the government. She advises consulting lawyers before signing any USCIS statements.

This policy sows anxiety over both serious issues and honest mistakes, threatening the security of long-term residents.

Verwandte Artikel

Illustration depicting USCIS immigration backlog with massive paperwork stacks and waiting applicants outside agency headquarters.
Bild generiert von KI

USCIS pending caseload nears 12 million as processing slows, NPR analysis finds

Von KI berichtet Bild generiert von KI Fakten geprüft

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.

Five months after the Trump administration paused immigration processing from high-risk countries following a deadly D.C. shooting, the policy—now covering 39 nations—has stranded thousands already in the U.S. in legal limbo, facing job losses, stalled careers, and deportation fears. Personal stories highlight hardship, while lawsuits yield court orders for relief.

Von KI berichtet

The US Citizenship and Immigration Services has announced that most applicants for permanent residency must return to their home countries to apply, ending a decades-old practice of adjustment of status inside the United States.

Senator Miguel Ángel Yunes Márquez denied on April 27 that his US visa has been canceled, following the leak of an audio recording. He claimed the audio is AI-generated and that both he and his father still hold valid visas. Yunes, expelled from PAN for supporting the 2024 judicial reform, promised to provide evidence on his next trip.

Von KI berichtet Fakten geprüft

As of late April 2026, five Republican-led states—Florida, Mississippi, South Dakota, Utah and Kentucky—had enacted new laws tying voter registration or ballot access to documentary proof of U.S. citizenship, according to Voting Rights Lab, a nonprofit that tracks election legislation. The measures come amid broader Republican-backed efforts at the state and federal levels to add citizenship-verification steps to election administration.

Diese Website verwendet Cookies

Wir verwenden Cookies für Analysen, um unsere Website zu verbessern. Lesen Sie unsere Datenschutzrichtlinie für weitere Informationen.
Ablehnen