Uncategorized

Feds ‘Actively Working’ on Crackdown on Welfare-Dependent Immigration

Federal immigration officials at the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) agency are “actively working” to enforce President Donald Trump’s recent crackdown on welfare-dependent legal immigration to the U.S.

In a memo last week, Acting USCIS Director Ken Cuccinelli said that staff would “develop and implement guidance” on Trump’s presidential memorandum signed last month that mandates American taxpayers be reimbursed when a legal immigrant uses public welfare.

The order signed by Trump will enforce existing 1996 laws known as the “Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act” and “Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act,” which were signed by then-President Bill Clinton.


Cuccinelli’s memo to staff reads:


Parents Speak Out After Daughter Suffers Life-Altering Injury Playing Volleyball Against Transgender Opponent
Merry Christmas to Female Athletes: Biden Admin Withdraws Title IX Changes in Unmistakable Admission of Defeat
The five most notable friendships Trump formed in 2024
Biden administration doled out millions to give LGBT migrants legal services, job training, and mental health support
Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen hospitalized after he was bucked off a horse
New York Gov. Hochul orders prison staffers involved in inmate’s deadly beating to be fired
Oaklanders call on Barbara Lee to be the city’s next mayor
Louisiana prisons routinely hold inmates past their release date, Justice Department argues
Drone mishap during Orlando holiday aerial show sends child to hospital
Trump names several new White House picks to work on AI, crypto and more: ‘America First Patriots’
China warns US to stop arming Taiwan after Biden approves $571M in military aid
Trump appoints former college football player Bo Hines to ‘crypto council’
Hochul slammed for saying she’s made subways safer on same day woman burned alive on train
Trump nominates Callista Gingrich as U.S. ambassador to Switzerland, announces other picks
Ceiling Their Fate: Congress Needs to Fix Its Spending Problem – Or Else

As part of USCIS’ implementation of this memorandum, USCIS officers will now be required to remind individuals at their adjustment of status interviews of their sponsors’ responsibilities under existing law and regulations. Our officers must remind applicants and sponsors that the Affidavit of Support is a legal and enforceable contract between the sponsor and the federal government. The sponsor must be willing and able to financially support the intending immigrant as outlined by law and regulations (see INA 213A and 8 CFR 213a). If the sponsored immigrant receives any federal means-tested public benefits, the sponsor will be expected to reimburse the benefits-granting agency for every dollar of benefits received by the immigrant. [Emphasis added]

Over the next several months, federal agencies will develop and implement guidance on the presidential memorandum to make sure that agencies enforce these requirements. USCIS will do our part, and we are actively working to implement the President’s directive with our federal partners, including by updating policies and regulations. We continue to advance the President’s directive to enforce the public charge ground of inadmissibility, which seeks to ensure that immigrants are self-sufficient and rely on their own capabilities and the resources of their families, their sponsors, and private organizations rather than public resources. [Emphasis added]

“Despite it being required under long-standing law, sponsors have never been held accountable for the public benefits taken by immigrants,” an administration official told Breitbart News. “This should be a reminder that signing an affidavit of support as a sponsor is both a promise and responsibility the government takes very seriously and will carry real consequences so that taxpayers don’t bear this burden for them.”

See also  Weird laws in Colorado, including one against throwing snowballs

Parents Speak Out After Daughter Suffers Life-Altering Injury Playing Volleyball Against Transgender Opponent
Merry Christmas to Female Athletes: Biden Admin Withdraws Title IX Changes in Unmistakable Admission of Defeat
The five most notable friendships Trump formed in 2024
Biden administration doled out millions to give LGBT migrants legal services, job training, and mental health support
Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen hospitalized after he was bucked off a horse
New York Gov. Hochul orders prison staffers involved in inmate’s deadly beating to be fired
Oaklanders call on Barbara Lee to be the city’s next mayor
Louisiana prisons routinely hold inmates past their release date, Justice Department argues
Drone mishap during Orlando holiday aerial show sends child to hospital
Trump names several new White House picks to work on AI, crypto and more: ‘America First Patriots’
China warns US to stop arming Taiwan after Biden approves $571M in military aid
Trump appoints former college football player Bo Hines to ‘crypto council’
Hochul slammed for saying she’s made subways safer on same day woman burned alive on train
Trump nominates Callista Gingrich as U.S. ambassador to Switzerland, announces other picks
Ceiling Their Fate: Congress Needs to Fix Its Spending Problem – Or Else

The first function of the order mandates that a family member or business sponsor of a legal immigrant looking to permanently resettle in the U.S. is responsible for paying back the welfare costs previously used by that immigrant.

See also  After Lying That Trump Wants to Cut Social Security, Dems Rush Bill That Will Cut Benefits - Need Biden to Sign Before Trump Arrives

For example, if a visa holder has used $10,000 in food stamp benefits while living in the U.S., when a family member sponsors them for a green card, that family member will be notified of the legal immigrant’s welfare costs to taxpayers and obligated to pay back the amount.

If the sponsor of a legal immigrant does not pay the welfare cost, the Treasury Offset Program will take the money out of the sponsor’s taxes for that year. Federal officials said implementation of this order would begin in September.


Parents Speak Out After Daughter Suffers Life-Altering Injury Playing Volleyball Against Transgender Opponent
Merry Christmas to Female Athletes: Biden Admin Withdraws Title IX Changes in Unmistakable Admission of Defeat
The five most notable friendships Trump formed in 2024
Biden administration doled out millions to give LGBT migrants legal services, job training, and mental health support
Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen hospitalized after he was bucked off a horse
New York Gov. Hochul orders prison staffers involved in inmate’s deadly beating to be fired
Oaklanders call on Barbara Lee to be the city’s next mayor
Louisiana prisons routinely hold inmates past their release date, Justice Department argues
Drone mishap during Orlando holiday aerial show sends child to hospital
Trump names several new White House picks to work on AI, crypto and more: ‘America First Patriots’
China warns US to stop arming Taiwan after Biden approves $571M in military aid
Trump appoints former college football player Bo Hines to ‘crypto council’
Hochul slammed for saying she’s made subways safer on same day woman burned alive on train
Trump nominates Callista Gingrich as U.S. ambassador to Switzerland, announces other picks
Ceiling Their Fate: Congress Needs to Fix Its Spending Problem – Or Else
See also  Judge dumbfounded by error at site of 'suicide' where teacher was found stabbed 20 times

The second function of the order ensures that the income a sponsor to a legal immigrant is taken into consideration when a legal immigrant is applying for federal welfare.

Currently, only the income of legal immigrants is considered by federal agencies when the national is applying for public benefits. Under the rules set out by Clinton’s 1996 law, the Trump administration will make certain that the income of both the legal immigrant and their sponsor is considered when applying for benefits.

The order also seeks to ban illegal aliens from receiving public welfare benefits at the American taxpayers’ expense.

Legal immigration controls that would prevent welfare-dependent nationals from permanently resettling in the U.S. — a rule set to be enforced sometime this year — would be a boon for American taxpayers in the form of an annual $57.4 billion tax cut. That is the amount taxpayers spend every year on paying for the welfare, crime, and schooling costs of the country’s mass importation of 1.2 million new, mostly low-skilled legal immigrants.

As Breitbart News reported, the majority of foreign nationals entering the country every year use about 57 percent more food stamps than the average native-born American household. Overall, immigrant households consume 33 percent more cash welfare than American citizen households and 44 percent more in Medicaid dollars. This straining of public services by the foreign-born population translates to the average immigrant household costing American taxpayers $6,234 in federal welfare.

Story cited here.
Share this article:
Share on Facebook
Facebook
Tweet about this on Twitter
Twitter