Non-Citizen Use of Welfare by Region and Country of Birth

A new report finds that welfare use among non-citizens in the United States varies significantly depending on their country of birth and region of origin. 

The analysis uses data from the federal government’s Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement and shows that non-citizens from Latin America, Sub-Saharan Africa, and the Middle East have the highest rates of welfare use, while non-citizens from Asia and Europe have the lowest.

Sanctuary Cities: The Cost of Undermining Law and Order

U.S. Senate Committee on the Budget

The Center estimates that more than half of the illegal immigrant population resides in sanctuary jurisdictions, with more than one-fifth in California. These policies are a significant hindrance to immigration enforcement and a challenge to the supremacy clause of the Constitution. Equally important, they bring substantial costs to the community.

Immigration Newsmaker: A Conversation with Rep. Brandon Gill

The Center for Immigration Studies hosted another in its Immigration Newsmaker series with a conversation with Rep. Brandon Gill.

Using State Department’s Internal Fraud Reports As a Diplomatic Tool to Combat Visa Fraud

Testimony before the U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary

Although the Department of State made valuable corrections in visa processing after the 2001 terrorism attacks, in recent years, too many institutional practices that prioritize visa issuance over security have become the norm.

It Is Impossible to Fully Vet Immigrants When a Culture of Corruption Exists

President Trump was left with no option other than to suspend entry from highly corrupt countries in order to prevent the further importation of cultures of corruption, since effective vetting is not possible. 

More remains to be done in order to ensure that future migrants are fully vetted, that they only come from the world’s least corrupt nations, and that they fully assimilate and build up the United States.

Non-Citizen Use of Welfare by Region and Country of Birth
Non-Citizen Use of Welfare by Region and Country of Birth
Sanctuary Cities: The Cost of Undermining Law and Order
Sanctuary Cities: The Cost of Undermining Law and Order
A Conversation with Rep. Brandon Gill
A Conversation with Rep. Brandon Gill
U.S. Senate Committee Testimony
U.S. Senate Committee Testimony
It Is Impossible to Fully Vet Immigrants
It Is Impossible to Fully Vet Immigrants

A new report finds that welfare use among non-citizens in the United States varies significantly depending on their country of birth and region of origin. 

The analysis uses data from the federal government’s Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement and shows that non-citizens from Latin America, Sub-Saharan Africa, and the Middle East have the highest rates of welfare use, while non-citizens from Asia and Europe have the lowest.

U.S. Senate Committee on the Budget

The Center estimates that more than half of the illegal immigrant population resides in sanctuary jurisdictions, with more than one-fifth in California. These policies are a significant hindrance to immigration enforcement and a challenge to the supremacy clause of the Constitution. Equally important, they bring substantial costs to the community.

The Center for Immigration Studies hosted another in its Immigration Newsmaker series with a conversation with Rep. Brandon Gill.

Testimony before the U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary

Although the Department of State made valuable corrections in visa processing after the 2001 terrorism attacks, in recent years, too many institutional practices that prioritize visa issuance over security have become the norm.

President Trump was left with no option other than to suspend entry from highly corrupt countries in order to prevent the further importation of cultures of corruption, since effective vetting is not possible. 

More remains to be done in order to ensure that future migrants are fully vetted, that they only come from the world’s least corrupt nations, and that they fully assimilate and build up the United States.

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Appellate Board Issues Three Opinions to Speed Deportation Orders

They upend de facto court-issued ‘amnesties’ for aliens facing deportation

In three recent decisions, the BIA has placed restraints on “continuances” and “administrative closures”, maneuvers that aliens, judges, and — at times — the government have used to impede the swift adjudication of the immigration laws. Expect quicker removal orders, shorter hearing times, and a rapid decline in the immigration courts’ crushing backlog to follow.

Immigrant Population Down, but Maybe Less than We Thought

Also, job losses absorbed by foreign workers, not the U.S.-born

New Census Bureau data shows that the adult foreign-born population, both legal and illegal, remains substantially smaller at the start of 2026 than it was in January 2025, when the Trump Administration took over. What's more, reecently reported job losses seem to have been among immigrants, not the native-born.
Topics: Current Numbers