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President Trump’s bold visa suspension now blocks spouses and children of U.S. citizens from 93 countries, shielding American families from unchecked immigration strains.
Story Snapshot
- State Department suspends immigrant visa processing for nationals of 75 additional countries effective January 21, 2026, expanding total to 93 nations.
- Impacts 48% of 2024 legal immigrant flows, including roughly 100,000 spouses and minor children of U.S. citizens and permanent residents.
- Justified by vetting deficiencies and welfare concerns, prioritizing American taxpayers over global family reunifications.
- Builds on Proclamations 10949 and 10998, enforcing strict security under INA §212(f) without congressional overreach.
- USCIS halts in-country adjustments, ensuring only vetted entrants protect U.S. sovereignty and resources.
Policy Expansion Details
The U.S. State Department issued a memo, obtained by Fox News, announcing suspension of immigrant visa processing for nationals from 75 more countries starting January 21, 2026. This follows restrictions on 40 prior countries, totaling 93 nations or 42% of the world. President Trump’s Proclamations 10949 from June 4, 2025, and 10998 effective January 1, 2026, target deficient vetting and security cooperation. Full bans apply to 19 countries like Afghanistan and Burma; partial bans cover 19 others. These measures restore order after years of Biden-era chaos, focusing executive authority on national security.
Protecting American Resources
State Department officials state the freeze ensures immigrants will not extract wealth from American taxpayers. Despite a 5-year welfare benefit bar for most legal immigrants, the policy addresses high-use concerns from targeted nations. This aligns with the second Trump administration’s agenda, including refugee cuts, parole endings for Cubans and Haitians, CBP One suspension, and green card lottery halt. Conservatives applaud restoring fiscal responsibility, countering past overspending and inflation fueled by open borders. Executive action under INA §212(f) bypasses congressional gridlock.
Family and Economic Safeguards
The suspension halts approximately 324,000 legal immigrants annually, based on 2024 data, including family reunification for U.S. citizen spouses and minor children. No broad exceptions exist for immediate relatives in the new policy, prioritizing verifiable security over emotional appeals. Long-term, this reduces growth pressures on debt-to-GDP ratios while immigrants remain net fiscal positives per some analyses. Businesses face vetting delays, but enhanced screening protects jobs and communities from risks. Courts upheld similar prior Trump bans, affirming constitutional authority.
In-country USCIS now denies adjustment of status for affected nationals, broadening from entry-only focus. This shift, guided late 2025, holds pending green card requests. TPS endings for Haiti and Venezuela compound barriers for returnees, deterring abuse of temporary programs.
Stakeholder Roles and Security Wins
President Trump drives the agenda through proclamations, with State Department and USCIS enforcing suspensions and holds. Secretary of State handles national interest exceptions; DHS and Attorney General offer case-by-case waivers. Fox News exposed the memo, highlighting transparency. Critics like Cato Institute label it extreme, but facts show immigrants from these nations pose vetting risks. This policy upholds limited government by securing borders first, relating to frustrations over illegal immigration and globalism eroding American priorities.
Short-term family separations affect U.S. citizen households, yet secure vetting preserves long-term family values. African (90%) and Asian (44%) applicants bear the brunt, shifting diaspora patterns responsibly.
Sources:
USCIS Broadens Scope of Adjudication Hold for Pending Benefit Requests of Certain Foreign Nationals
New Ban Hits Half Legal Immigrants, Even Citizens’ Spouses & Kids
President Expands Full and Partial Travel Ban List
Suspension of Visa Issuance to Foreign Nationals to Protect the Security of the United States
USCIS Is Citing Travel Bans to Deny Change of Status: What You Need to Know
US Immigration Vetting Initiatives, Expanded Travel Bans, Social Media Mining, ESTA Selfies and More
Which Countries Are Banned from the U.S. in 2026
Expanded “Travel Ban” to Take Effect January 1, 2026
President Trump Expands His Travel Ban: What You Need to Know

