Court Correctly Rules: Only Congress Can Fix the Broken Asylum and Removal Laws that Congress Created

Two new analyses by Center for Immigration Studies Senior Legal Fellow George Fishman conclude that a recent court ruling correctly reaffirms a fundamental constitutional principle: Congress, not the executive branch, writes the nation's immigration laws.

Welfare Use by Non-Citizens Across States in the U.S.

This new report finds that households headed by non-citizens access means-tested welfare programs at substantially higher rates than households headed by U.S.-born Americans in virtually every state.

Immigration Newsmaker: A Conversation with Rodney Scott

Interview with the head of America’s largest law enforcement agency

Rodney Scott, Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, joined Center Executive Director Mark Krikorian for an in-depth conversation on the challenges facing CBP and the administration’s broader enforcement strategy.

Hearing on ‘Abuses of U.S. Immigration Policies and Resulting Impacts on Americans’

Before the Task Force on Defending Constitutional Rights and Exposing Institutional Abuses, Of the U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Oversight and Government Reform 

There are steps Congress can take to help fight fraud, but when something this valuable is on offer – residence in the United States – there will always be some who seek to break the rules to get it.

USCIS Shift on Green Card Processing

The Center for Immigration Studies has released a series of analyses examining a recent USCIS memo emphasizing that adjustment of status - the process allowing certain aliens, either temporary visa holders or unlawfully present, who are eligible for permanent residence to obtain it without leaving the United States - is a discretionary benefit and not a guaranteed alternative to consular processing abroad.

Only Congress Can Fix What Congress Created
Only Congress Can Fix What Congress Created
Welfare Use by Non-Citizens
Welfare Use by Non-Citizens
A Conversation with Rodney Scott
A Conversation with Rodney Scott
Hearing on Abuses of Immigration Policies
Hearing on Abuses of Immigration Policies
USCIS Shift on Green Card Processing
USCIS Shift on Green Card Processing

Two new analyses by Center for Immigration Studies Senior Legal Fellow George Fishman conclude that a recent court ruling correctly reaffirms a fundamental constitutional principle: Congress, not the executive branch, writes the nation's immigration laws.

This new report finds that households headed by non-citizens access means-tested welfare programs at substantially higher rates than households headed by U.S.-born Americans in virtually every state.

Interview with the head of America’s largest law enforcement agency

Rodney Scott, Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, joined Center Executive Director Mark Krikorian for an in-depth conversation on the challenges facing CBP and the administration’s broader enforcement strategy.

Before the Task Force on Defending Constitutional Rights and Exposing Institutional Abuses, Of the U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Oversight and Government Reform 

There are steps Congress can take to help fight fraud, but when something this valuable is on offer – residence in the United States – there will always be some who seek to break the rules to get it.

The Center for Immigration Studies has released a series of analyses examining a recent USCIS memo emphasizing that adjustment of status - the process allowing certain aliens, either temporary visa holders or unlawfully present, who are eligible for permanent residence to obtain it without leaving the United States - is a discretionary benefit and not a guaranteed alternative to consular processing abroad.

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Excerpt: The Rocha Spy Case: Espionage and Conflicted Loyalty

The Trump administration must require that dual-national officials renounce any second citizenship as a condition of holding a security clearance.

Decades of multiculturalism and unassimilated immigration have introduced a subtler challenge than simple espionage: government officials whose attachments to another nation may influence their judgment, create conflicts of interest, or leave them vulnerable to foreign pressure. Even when loyalty to the United States is unquestioned, secondary allegiances can complicate decision-making in sensitive positions.

Aliens Convicted for Illegal Reentry — in Northern Ohio

Immigration enforcement on the banks of Lake Erie, to ‘encourage’ other alien scofflaws in the Buckeye State to leave voluntarily

When Donald Trump returned to the Oval Office — and “Border Czar” Tom Homan came back to DHS — they dove into the INA to use the long-ignored powers therein to deliver on the president’s immigration promises. Congress gave DHS and DOJ the tools they need to enforce the immigration laws it wrote. And finally, they are putting them to good use — including on the banks of the Great Lakes.

Excerpt: Biden’s Border Crisis Will Return If We Don’t Close These Loopholes Now

Presidents have shown that they cannot be trusted to be responsible in using the discretion Congress has given them in immigration policy.

People imagine that legal and illegal immigration are separate, distinct things. But there’s a grey area between them that presidents for years have exploited to create a shadow immigration system to circumvent the limits imposed by Congress. The Trump administration is working to undo the damage caused by its predecessors, but unless Congress changes the law, the next Democrat president will just restart the shadow system.

What’s Going on with the Missing Kids?

Former HHS Official Reports on Challenges and Progress Made

New information revealing the scale of the Biden administration’s shockingly negligent handling of unaccompanied alien children (UACs) was divulged by former senior Health and Human Services (HHS) appointee John Fabbricatore in a presentation at the Heritage Foundation last week.

BIA Drops Hammer on Aliens Filing Late Motions to Reopen and to Stay Removal Orders

Equities acquired years after orders are final don’t count for much, and aliens seeking stays must now ask DHS first

As the Board of Immigration Appeals noted in 2017, there’s “an important public interest in the finality of immigration proceedings”. Despite that, for decades aliens have ignored removal orders, only to rush to the BIA once ICE showed up. After these recent BIA decisions, such aliens may find themselves out of luck — and the Board will definitely have fewer dilatory, late-filed motions to deal with.

Colorado Sheriff and Prosecutor Contest State Law Requiring that U Visas Be Rubber-Stamped

The U.S. Department of Justice has filed a motion asking to join a lawsuit challenging a 2021 state law that imposes requirements designed to force state and local law enforcement agencies to approve certifications for U visas, which are available for certain victims of serious crimes. This case could be significant, because Colorado is just one of several states where the legislature has passed a similar law.