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Trump’s Green Card Policies: Promises vs. Reality

by Pia

Trump's Green Card Policies: Promises vs. Reality

This presentation examines former President Donald Trump’s promises regarding green cards and legal immigration during his term. We’ll explore what was proposed and what actually occurred, providing an objective analysis of the outcomes.

The Push for Merit-Based Immigration

Promise

Trump advocated for a shift from family-based to meritbased immigration. He cited Canada and Australia’s pointsbased systems as models to follow

Reality

No legislative changes were made. Proposals like the RAISE Act failed to pass in Congress. The family-based system remained largely intact.

Green Cards for U.S. College Graduates

Promise

Automatic green cards for international students graduating from U.S. universities, especially in STEM fields.

Reality

Proposal never implemented. Stricter guidelines placed on OPT and F-1 visa holders.

Impact

Harder for international graduates to stay in the U.S. after completing their studies.

Reducing Legal Immigration Numbers

Promise

Cut legal immigration by half

Action

Executive orders and procedural changes implemented.

Result

Reduced green cards issued without new laws

Impact

Longer delays and stricter scrutiny on visa petitions.

Faster Green Card Processing

Promise

Speed up green card approvals for skilled workers. Reduce the backlog for employment-based visas.

Reality

Backlogs grew due to increased processing times and stricter requirements.

Result

Resources redirected to border security and asylum cases, further delaying processing

The Diversity Visa Lottery

Promise

End the Diversity Visa Lottery program, which allocates 50,000 green cards annually

Reality

The program remained in place. No legislation was passed to abolish it.

Result

Applicants from underrepresented countries continued to have this immigration pathway.

Executive Orders vs. Legislation

Executive Action

Most changes enacted through executive orders or procedural adjustments. This allowed for quicker implementation but less permanence.

Legislative Attempts

Sweeping immigration reforms proposed but not passed. Congress remained divided on major policy changes.

Practical Impact

Legal immigration numbers fell significantly. Skilled workers and families faced longer wait times and more denials.

Conclusion: Promises vs. Delivery

Fewer Implemented Changes

Many proposed overhauls to the green card system never materialized.

Increased Restrictions

Existing processes became slower and more restrictive for legal immigrants.

Ongoing Debate

Immigration reform remains a contentious issue in American politics.

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