Possible Determining Factor in Green Card Approval Under Trump Admin Revealed

A century-old immigration principle is making a forceful return to U.S. policy, as federal officials move to reinstate strict financial scrutiny for anyone applying to live permanently in the United States.

At the heart of the change is a renewed emphasis on self-sufficiency, a standard immigration officials say had been eroded by a Biden administration policy now being wiped off the books.

Homeland Security officials confirmed the reversal targets a 2022 regulation that had sharply limited what factors could be used to judge whether an immigrant might become reliant on taxpayer-funded programs.

That limitation is gone. In its place, a broader evaluation system will let immigration officers examine a wide range of personal circumstances, from an applicant’s health and age to their financial assets and benefit history.

Medicaid enrollment and other forms of welfare assistance will now factor directly into whether someone is approved for a green card, according to reporting from CBS News.

The mechanism driving these decisions is known as the “public charge” test, a legal standard used for generations to determine whether a prospective resident is likely to depend on government support.

Its roots stretch back more than 140 years to the Immigration Act of 1882, legislation that barred entry to anyone considered incapable of supporting themselves financially.

Generations of immigrants passing through Ellis Island encountered this same requirement, often having to prove to inspectors that they would not become dependent on public charity once inside the country.

Lawmakers added another hurdle decades later. The Immigration Act of 1917 required immigrants older than 16 to demonstrate basic literacy before being granted entry into the United States.

Under the framework now being reinstated, federal law permits authorities to reject visa, green card or admission requests if an officer believes the applicant could become a public charge “at any time” in the future.

The Biden-era rule had narrowed that authority considerably, restricting officers to weighing only direct cash assistance and taxpayer-funded long-term care when making such determinations.

That narrower approach is being scrapped entirely. Immigration officers will instead conduct individualized, case-by-case assessments incorporating a fuller financial and personal profile of each applicant.

Thousands of people who apply for green cards annually are expected to feel the effects of the shift, with many likely to steer clear of public assistance programs covering food, housing or medical care while their applications remain pending.

The policy will apply equally to immigrants already living in the U.S. who are seeking to adjust their status, as well as to those applying for admission from outside the country.

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CBS News reported that the rule is set to be filed for public inspection on Thursday, though a 60-day waiting period will precede its formal implementation.

USCIS Director Joseph Edlow tied the policy directly to broader Trump administration immigration goals, describing the effort as a return to foundational American values.

“Under President Donald Trump, USCIS is restoring the basic principle that immigrants must be able to support themselves,” Edlow said.

Edlow further stated that the agency “is reaffirming the requirement of self-reliance, protecting public resources and ending policies that encouraged dependency on the backs of hard-working American taxpayers.”

The rule change follows a period administration officials describe as marked by historically high levels of illegal immigration under former President Joe Biden.

Immigration attorneys and applicants now have a two-month window to prepare for the expanded scrutiny before enforcement officially begins.

For those currently navigating the green card process, the coming weeks may prove critical in determining how their financial histories and benefit usage will be assessed once the new standard takes hold.

By Reece Walker

Reece Walker covers news and politics with a focus on exposing public and private policies proposed by governments, unelected globalists, bureaucrats, Big Tech companies, defense departments, and intelligence agencies.

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