Trump Re-election: Effects on k1 Fiance + CR1 Spouse Visa, Green Card Immigration
Автор: VisaCoach
Загружено: 25 нояб. 2024 г.
Просмотров: 16 216 просмотров
https://www.visacoach.com/trump-re-el... Based on President Trump's last time in office, as well as more recent statements and actions, expect that there will be many policy changes enacted to "Restrict Immigration". Executive orders are anticipated that will slow the immigration process, raise eligibility requirements, and overall make it more complicated and difficult to sponsor immediate family members, such as fiancees on K1 visas, spouses on CR1 and IR1 visas and may eliminate the right to sponsor parents and siblings.
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While President Trump's specific immigration policies for his second term remain unclear,
his past actions and statements give us a good idea on what to expect. His 2019 tweet,
"Our Country is Full," and the numerous executive orders on immigration issued during
his previous administration suggest there will be continued efforts to RESTRICT immigration.
While there is a lot of talk about building a wall on the border, deportation of illegals,
changes to DACA and De-naturalization of Naturalized Citizens, and so on, this video is about
the potential changes that may effect those applying for their fiancé‘s, spouses, and immediate family members.
During President Trump's last term, he signed 220 executive orders. Many on immigration.
President Biden revoked 71 of these orders, mostly right after he began his term of office.
I expect that most of immigration executive orders that President Trump had issued
and which were revoked are now being dusted off, re-written in a way to make them less likely to be overturned (based on past experience) and readied to be reissued soon
after his inauguration on January 20.
Travel Bans
Last time President Trump put a freeze on the issuance of visas for travelers from
Eritrea, Iran, Kyrgyzstan, Libya, Myanmar, Nigeria, North Korea, Somalia, Sudan, Syria,
Tanzania, Venezuela and Yemen
If this happens again, and your partner is from one of these countries, you may suffer years of extra waiting before your partner can join you in the USA.
Vigorous Enforcement of Immigration Laws
President Trump mandated that USCIS vigorously enforce and administer immigration laws, take no short cuts.
"We have to get much tougher, much smarter, and less
politically correct," President Trump said.
What this means is that immigration officers will very closely examine
and scrutinize all cases looking for reasons to deny. This will cause
delays in processing, and a greater percentage of denied cases.
Increased Requests for Evidence (RFEs)
When a case is being processed at USCIS, the USCIS reviewing officer examines the contents of each application determining an applicant's eligibility. Sometimes a required document might be missing. If so, then the officer issues an RFE (request for evidence) asking for the missing item allowing the applicant 87 days to respond.
During the previous Trump Administration, USCIS issued two or three times more RFE’s than we had experienced at any prior time. Often these were for trivial reasons. We even got asked to resubmit documents already correctly submitted. The only apparent reason for such ‘nitpicking" was to cause a systemic slowdown to all case processing.
Extreme Vetting
During the last Trump Administration, proposed Extreme Immigration Vetting, where during
consulate interviews, applicants were asked to hand over their phones so that their contact
list and photos could be examined by the embassy or consulate and to provide social media
usernames and passwords for examination of an applicant's private and public posts.
Proposed last time, but not put into effect then was to require applicants to provide 15 years’
worth of travel, employment and address history, up from the current 5 years, and to institute
an "ideological test" on the applicant’s view of society, culture and the USA.
Stricter Public Benefits/Financial Eligibility Rules
To sponsor your Fiance, Spouse or other family member, you must demonstrate that you have
adequate income so that your increased household size with the addition of your foreign partner will never need to receive government assistance, Welfare, so called Public Benefits.

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