The Trump administration is ramping up its immigration enforcement yet again — this time with a sweeping, behind-the-scenes review that could impact more than 55 million foreigners currently holding valid U.S. visas.
In a written response to a question from The Associated Press, the State Department confirmed on Thursday that it is now “reviewing the records” of all visa holders for potential revocation or deportable violations of immigration law. This signals a dramatic expansion of the administration’s vetting efforts.
“All U.S. visa holders are subject to ‘continuous vetting’ with an eye toward any indication that they could be ineligible for the document,” the department said.
If such information is uncovered, officials stated, “the visa will be revoked and, if the visa holder is in the United States, he or she would be subject to deportation.”
The department says it is scanning for a broad range of red flags, including visa overstays, criminal activity, threats to public safety, terrorist ties, or support for terrorist organizations.
“We review all available information as part of our vetting, including law enforcement or immigration records or any other information that comes to light after visa issuance indicating a potential ineligibility,” the department said.
Since President Donald Trump returned to office in January, his administration has escalated deportations of both illegal migrants and those on student and visitor exchange visas. The new announcement reveals that the process now reaches far wider than previously known.
What began as a focused re-vetting initiative — reportedly aimed at students tied to pro-Palestinian or anti-Israel activity — has now broadened into an effort targeting all visa categories, from tourists and workers to scholars and investors.
Officials say the comprehensive checks include everything from social media activity to law enforcement and immigration records in visa holders’ home countries, as well as any violations of U.S. law.
The crackdown is already producing results.
“As part of the Trump Administration’s commitment to protect U.S. national security and public safety, since Inauguration Day the State Department has revoked more than twice as many visas, including nearly four times as many student visas, as during the same time period last year,” the department said.
Just this week, officials disclosed that over 6,000 student visas have been revoked since Trump’s return, citing visa overstays and violations of local, state, and federal law — the vast majority involving assault, DUIs, or support for terrorism.
Of those 6,000, approximately 4,000 were due to actual infractions, and around 200 to 300 visas were revoked for terrorism-related concerns, including providing material support to designated terrorist organizations or state sponsors of terrorism.
The administration has also imposed tougher requirements on new visa applicants — including mandatory in-person interviews — and is currently weighing the potential destruction of a $9 million contraceptive stockpile as part of broader policy shifts.
The Biden-era laxity on immigration is gone. Under Trump’s second term, the message is clear: no visa is safe from scrutiny, and no violation is too small to prompt a revocation or deportation order.














Continue with Google