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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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.

SCOTUS to Hear ‘Mandatory Detention’ Case on Criminal Aliens in Removal Proceedings

Not any of the ones involving illegal entrants, but a case with important implications nonetheless

Despite the Supreme Court’s clear admonitions to the contrary, lower courts have crafted constitutional arguments to justify releasing aliens in removal proceedings, including criminals, and their inclination to do so is only increasing. The justices have an opportunity in Black to reverse that questionable trend — and to spare the High Court a lot more work in the future.

The Half-Baked, Exhausting Arguments About ‘Violent Felon’ Aliens Arrested under Trump II

Spare me the faux outrage — or at least, mention the impact of the Laken Riley Act and sanctuary policies

Both Trump and his “Border Czar” Tom Homan would love to fill all of ICE’s 60,000-plus detention beds with alien killers, rapists, robbers, assaulters, burglars, thieves, larcenists, and shoplifters, but when at least half (likely more) of all alien criminals are being held or were released in jurisdictions that actively impede such enforcement, what do all of the media outlets and critics expect DHS to do?

Update on the Illegal-Alien School Superintendent in Iowa

Ian Roberts sentenced to prison, but many questions are still unanswered, even as two vulnerabilities in the immigration work authorization system are exposed

Who is “Dr.” Ian Roberts, aside from an illegal alien nonimmigrant overstay from Guyana turned school superintendent who seemingly rivaled “Professor” Harold Hill in The Music Man with his ability to flim-flam naïve but powerful U.S. educational institutions?

The Strange Case of ‘Number 8’ on DOJ’s Latest Denaturalization List

Why did DOJ wait to denaturalize a man who was convicted of immigration-related crimes in 2021?

It’s a positive development that DOJ now treats U.S. citizenship as “a privilege” that “must be earned honestly”, but that should have always been true. If it took 47 administrations to get to this point, I’m a tad dismayed — and a little concerned about what happens when 48 shows up.