Welfare Use by Non-Citizens Across States in the U.S.

This new report finds that households headed by non-citizens access means-tested welfare programs at substantially higher rates than households headed by U.S.-born Americans in virtually every state.

Immigration Newsmaker: A Conversation with Rodney Scott

Interview with the head of America’s largest law enforcement agency

Rodney Scott, Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, joined Center Executive Director Mark Krikorian for an in-depth conversation on the challenges facing CBP and the administration’s broader enforcement strategy.

Hearing on ‘Abuses of U.S. Immigration Policies and Resulting Impacts on Americans’

Before the Task Force on Defending Constitutional Rights and Exposing Institutional Abuses, Of the U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Oversight and Government Reform 

There are steps Congress can take to help fight fraud, but when something this valuable is on offer – residence in the United States – there will always be some who seek to break the rules to get it.

USCIS Shift on Green Card Processing

The Center for Immigration Studies has released a series of analyses examining a recent USCIS memo emphasizing that adjustment of status - the process allowing certain aliens, either temporary visa holders or unlawfully present, who are eligible for permanent residence to obtain it without leaving the United States - is a discretionary benefit and not a guaranteed alternative to consular processing abroad.

Denaturalization and its Constitutional Limits

George Fishman, Senior Legal Fellow at the Center for Immigration Studies, testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on the Constitution at a hearing titled “Protecting American Citizenship III: Denaturalization and its Constitutional Limits.”

Welfare Use by Non-Citizens
Welfare Use by Non-Citizens
A Conversation with Rodney Scott
A Conversation with Rodney Scott
Hearing on Abuses of Immigration Policies
Hearing on Abuses of Immigration Policies
USCIS Shift on Green Card Processing
USCIS Shift on Green Card Processing
Denaturalization and its Constitutional Limits
Denaturalization and its Constitutional Limits

This new report finds that households headed by non-citizens access means-tested welfare programs at substantially higher rates than households headed by U.S.-born Americans in virtually every state.

Interview with the head of America’s largest law enforcement agency

Rodney Scott, Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, joined Center Executive Director Mark Krikorian for an in-depth conversation on the challenges facing CBP and the administration’s broader enforcement strategy.

Before the Task Force on Defending Constitutional Rights and Exposing Institutional Abuses, Of the U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Oversight and Government Reform 

There are steps Congress can take to help fight fraud, but when something this valuable is on offer – residence in the United States – there will always be some who seek to break the rules to get it.

The Center for Immigration Studies has released a series of analyses examining a recent USCIS memo emphasizing that adjustment of status - the process allowing certain aliens, either temporary visa holders or unlawfully present, who are eligible for permanent residence to obtain it without leaving the United States - is a discretionary benefit and not a guaranteed alternative to consular processing abroad.

George Fishman, Senior Legal Fellow at the Center for Immigration Studies, testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on the Constitution at a hearing titled “Protecting American Citizenship III: Denaturalization and its Constitutional Limits.”

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Congress (Finally) Passes Immigration-Enforcement Funding Bill for ICE and CBP

Those who broke a key appropriations norm should be worried about payback

The word “deadbeat” describes those who demand what they won’t pay for, and little except partisan maneuvers prevented that epithet from being applied to Congress — the source of the immigration laws but a branch that until this week stalled on paying for their enforcement.

More H-1Bs than There Are Computer Jobs

The good news is that between May 2024 and May 2025 the U.S. gained 41,060 computer jobs. The bad news is that in 2025 the U.S. imported 52,938 workers for computer jobs on H-1B visas alone. Even more foreign computer workers come under an alphabet soup of other work programs (e.g., OPT, L, E, TN).

Latest Harvard/Harris Poll Shows Increasing Support for ‘Mass Deportations’

The survey is all over the place — but it’s clear that voters want illegal criminal aliens gone

The latest Harvard/Harris poll is a mixed bag for the Trump administration. That said, it shows an increase in support for “mass deportations” of aliens here unlawfully, and a big jump in voters favoring removal of illegal aliens who have committed crimes in this country.

A View from the Frontlines: Why the Court’s Rejection of the $100,000 H-1B Fee Safeguards Corporate Fraud, Not the Rule of Law

U.S. District Judge Leo T. Sorokin has struck down the $100,000 H-1B entry fee. Siding with a coalition of corporate-backed, blue-state attorneys general led by California, the judge ruled that the fee was an unauthorized "tax". By prioritizing legal hairsplitting and corporate profit margins over the clear intent of the Immigration and Nationality Act, this ruling serves as a massive setback for American workers, national security, and economic integrity.