Citizenship and naturalization are under attack

Citizenship and naturalization are under attack

The Trump administration is wasting no time making American citizenship harder to access and easier to deny.

Just weeks into the new term, the Trump administration has proposed alarming changes to multiple immigration forms, including the naturalization application. These changes include requiring immigrants to disclose all of their social media usernames and provide personal information about family members, even if those relatives are undocumented and the information is irrelevant to the merit of a naturalization application.

The government is also forcing permanent residents to choose between disclosing personal information about people they care about, possibly risking their deportation, and accessing naturalization.

In another blow, the Department of Homeland Security terminated the Citizenship and Integration Grant Program. These essential grants, started in 2009, have enjoyed bipartisan support and allowed trusted local organizations to help lawful permanent residents become U.S. citizens. Community-based nonprofits with long and successful track records have relied on this support to provide legal assistance and civic and English instruction. The decision to cancel the grants — which are funded through congressional appropriations — cuts off critical infrastructure and undermines efforts that have helped thousands of immigrants learn English and complete the naturalization process.

When the Asian Counseling and Referral Service, an organization in Seattle that provides naturalization services, learned that their DHS grant had been terminated, they shared that the grant “constitutes 27 percent of the total annual funding for our citizenship program, so this cut will have a significant impact on our community, our programming, and our team. Many lawful permanent residents now feel unsafe and uncertain about their future, leading to an all-time high demand for citizenship and naturalization services.” Despite these challenges, organizations like Asian Counseling and Referral Service are committed to promoting naturalization and helping aspiring immigrants achieve their American Dream.

Unfortunately, more barriers are likely coming, such as increased application fees, a revised naturalization test designed to lower the passing rate and potential delays in processing times, especially if the application becomes more burdensome. Even immigrants who meet all the legal requirements for naturalization are being made to jump through unnecessary hoops to slow down their path to U.S. citizenship.

Collecting social media histories and investigating family background are not about public safety but about surveillance. Eliminating funding for citizenship preparation is not about efficiency, it is about dismantling a system that works.

These threats matter because more than 10 million lawful permanent residents in the U.S. are potentially eligible to apply for citizenship. That’s 10 million people who are already part of our communities. They are working, raising families and paying taxes. These people are simply trying to complete the final step in the immigration process to become American citizens.

Citizenship provides legal protection, opens doors to better jobs and protects from deportation. According to the Migration Policy Institute, naturalized citizens tend to earn higher incomes and experience lower poverty rates. These contributions benefit U.S. citizens too, by boosting the economy through higher tax revenue, economic growth ...

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