- The Trump administration is considering a plan to summarily reject certain asylum applications without interviews if filed a year after arrival in the U.S.
- This proposed guidance from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) would send rejected cases directly to immigration courts, where applicants would face Department of Justice lawyers and judges.
- Critics, including the American Immigration Council, argue this move undermines due process and is part of a broader effort to restrict legal immigration pathways.
- The administration justifies these actions by claiming the asylum process is ripe for fraud and aims to clear a backlog of over 3 million immigration cases to accelerate mass deportations.
- Other measures include increasing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) authority to prosecute lawyers representing asylum seekers and transforming USCIS into a powerful law enforcement arm.
IN FULL
Trump team wants to be able to reject asylum requests without interviewing migrants: report