US: New rules to deny green cards to many legal immigrants
The Trump administration announced on Monday it is
moving forward with one of its most aggressive steps yet to restrict legal
immigration: Denying green cards to many migrants who use Medicaid, food
stamps, housing vouchers or other forms of public assistance.
Federal law already requires those seeking to become
permanent residents or gain legal status to prove they will not be a burden to
the US - a “public charge,” in government speak -but the new rules detail a
broader range of programs that could disqualify them.
It’s part of a dramatic overhaul of the nation’s
immigration system that the administration has been working to put in place,
despite legal pushback.
While most attention has focused on President Donald
Trump’s efforts to crack down on illegal immigration, including recent raids in
Mississippi and the continued separation of migrant parents from their
children, the new rules target people who entered the United States legally and
are seeking permanent status.
Trump is trying to move the US toward a system that
focuses on immigrants’ skills instead of emphasizing the reunification of
families.
Under the new rules, US Citizenship and Immigration
Services will now weigh whether applicants have received public assistance
along with other factors such as education, income and health to determine
whether to grant legal status.
The rules will take effect in mid-October. They
don’t apply to US citizens, though immigrants related to the citizens may be
subject to them.
Ken Cuccinelli, acting director of Citizenship and
Immigration Services, said the rule change will ensure those who come to the
country don’t become a burden, though they pay taxes.
“We want to see people coming to this country who
are self-sufficient,” Cuccinelli said. “That’s a core principle of the American
dream. It’s deeply embedded in our history, and particularly our history
related to legal immigration.”
Migrants make up a small percentage of those who get
public benefits. In fact, many are ineligible for such benefits because of
their immigration status.
Immigrant rights groups strongly criticized the
changes, warning the rules would scare immigrants away from asking for needed
help. And they voiced concern the rules give officials too much authority to
decide whether someone is likely to need public assistance in the future.
The Los Angeles-based National Immigration Law
Center said it would file a lawsuit, calling the new rules an attempt to
redefine the legal immigration system “in order to disenfranchise communities
of color and favor the wealthy.”
And David Skorton, president and CEO of the
Association of American Medical Colleges said,
“The consequences of this action will be to
potentially exacerbate illnesses and increase the costs of care when their
condition becomes too severe to ignore,”
“This change will worsen existing health inequities
and disparities, cause further harm to many underserved and vulnerable
populations and increase costs to the health care system overall, which will
affect all patients,” he said in a statement.
Cuccinelli defended the move, insisting the
administration was not rejecting long-held American values.
Pressed on the Emma Lazarus poem emblazoned below
the Statue of Liberty that reads: “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled
masses yearning to breathe free,” he told reporters at the White House: “I’m
certainly not prepared to take anything down off the Statue of Liberty.”
A new Pew Research Center survey released on Monday
found the American public is broadly critical of the administration’s handling
of the wave of migrants at the southern border, with nearly two-thirds of
Americans - 65% - saying the federal government is doing a very bad or somewhat
bad job.
The survey found broad support for developing a
pathway to legal status for immigrants living in the country illegally.
On average, 544,000 people apply for green cards
every year, with about 382,000 falling into categories that would be subject to
the new review, according to the government.
Guidelines in use since 1999 refer to a “public
charge” as someone primarily dependent on cash assistance, income maintenance
or government support.
Under the new rules, the Department of Homeland
Security has redefined a public charge as someone who is “more likely than not”
to receive public benefits for more than 12 months within a 36-month period.
If someone uses two benefits, that is counted as two
months. And the definition has been broadened to include Medicaid, housing
assistance and food assistance under the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance
Program, or SNAP.
Following publication of the proposed rules last
fall, the Homeland Security Department received 266,000 public comments, more
than triple the average number. It made a series of amendments to the final
rules as a result.
For example, women who are pregnant and on Medicaid
or who need public assistance will not be subject to the new rules during
pregnancy or for 60 days after giving birth.
The Medicare Part D low-income subsidy also won’t be
considered a public benefit. And benefits received by children until the age of
21 won’t be considered. Nor will emergency medical assistance, school lunch
programs, foster care or adoption, student loans and mortgages, food pantries,
homeless shelters or disaster relief.
Active US military members are also exempt, as are
refugees and asylum seekers. And the rules will not be applied retroactively,
officials said.
Green card hopefuls will be required to submit three
years of federal tax returns in addition to a history of employment. If
immigrants have private health insurance, that will weigh heavily in their
favor.
According to an Associated Press analysis of census
data, low-income immigrants who are not citizens use Medicaid, food aid, cash
assistance and Supplemental Security Income, or SSI, at a lower rate than comparable
low-income native-born adults.
Non-citizen immigrants represent 6.5% of those
participating in Medicaid and 8.8% of those receiving food assistance.
The new public assistance threshold, taken together
with higher requirements for education, work skills and health, will make it
more difficult for immigrants to qualify for green cards, advocates say.
“Without a single change in the law by Congress, the
Trump public charge rules mean many more US citizens are being and will be
denied the opportunity to live together in the US with their spouses, children
and parents,” said Ur Jaddou, a former Citizenship and Immigration Services
chief counsel who is now director of the DHS Watch run by an immigrant advocacy
group.
Jaddou added: “These are not just small changes.
They are big changes with enormous consequences for US citizens.”