US green
card applicants will now have to return to home countries to apply, DHS says
Change
criticized by advocates marks the latest significant move by the Trump
administration on immigration policy
José
Olivares in New York and agency
Fri 22
May 2026 18.19 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/may/22/green-card-applicants-trump-administration
Foreigners
seeking to adjust their immigration status in the United States to secure green
cards will have to do so from outside the country via the state department, the
US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) said on Friday, in a move
criticized by aid groups, policy analysts and immigration attorneys.
USCIS
announced the move in a policy memo, which directed officers to consider
relevant factors and information on a case-by-case basis when determining
whether extraordinary relief is warranted.
The green
card process had been unchanged for more than 60 years, marking the latest
significant move by the Trump administration on immigration policy.
“An alien
who is in the US temporarily and wants a Green Card must return to their home
country to apply,” said the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which has
oversight of USCIS.
“This
policy allows our immigration system to function as the law intended instead of
incentivizing loopholes.”
According
to an analyst with the Cato Institute, more than 1 million immigrants in the US
are waiting on their green cards.
People
apply for green cards in two separate ways: by applying at a US consulate
abroad, or by applying for a green card while already in the US, which is
called an “adjustment of status”.
With the
new USCIS policy, many green card applicants in the US will probably be
required to leave while their cases are processed – particularly affecting
mixed-status families nationwide by forcing green card applicants to leave
jobs, homes and relationships for an unknown amount of time. The agency is
already struggling with a backlog of visa and green card cases.
It is
unclear how currently pending green card cases will be affected.
HIAS, an
aid group that provides services to refugees, among other groups of immigrants,
said USCIS was forcing survivors of trafficking and abused and neglected
children to return to the dangerous countries they fled in order to process
their applications for green cards granting them permanent residency in the US.
Friday’s
policy change is the latest in a series of steps taken by Donald Trump over the
last year to tighten immigration to the United States. Last year, the Trump
administration moved to shorten the duration of visas for students, cultural
exchange visitors and members of the media.
In
January, the state department announced that it had revoked more than 100,000
visas in the second Trump administration. The administration has also attacked
other immigrants with legal status in the US, like refugees and other protected
immigrants.
Reuters
contributed reporting

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