An immigrant from Venezuela tries in useless to entry the CBP One app a day after the second inauguration of President Trump on Jan. 21, 2025, in Nogales, Mexico. The incoming administration shut down the app, which was created by the Biden administration to permit migrants to schedule appointments to realize entry into america.
John Moore/Getty Photographs
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John Moore/Getty Photographs
Greater than 1.6 million immigrants have misplaced their authorized standing within the first 11 months of President Trump’s presidency. The staggering quantity consists of individuals who utilized for and have been accepted to return to the nation on all kinds of immigration parole, visa, asylum and non permanent protected standing applications. That quantity exceeds Philadelphia’s total inhabitants.
That is the biggest effort to remove deportation protections for migrants who’re within the nation legally. Immigration advocates say it is very doubtless an undercount.
“These have been authorized pathways. Folks did the factor the federal government requested them to do, and this authorities went and preemptively revoked that standing,” mentioned Todd Schulte, president of FWD.us, an immigration advocacy group that has been monitoring the efforts to delegalize immigrants.
“There’s nothing near this. Like there isn’t any president of both celebration who has mentioned, ‘Central to my effort is revoking the work authorization and authorized standing for thousands and thousands of individuals.'”

Most of the immigrants who misplaced authorized standing have been within the nation for years. Now, they concern what may occur ought to their immigration circumstances not course of shortly sufficient. The administration has inspired immigrants to go away the nation because it removes their authorized authorization.
“The American taxpayer will not bear the monetary burden of unlawfully current aliens,” U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Companies spokesperson Matthew Tragesser mentioned, in response to a request for remark about considerations that the administration is making extra folks deportable.
In one other effort to remove current authorized pathways, Homeland Safety Secretary Kristi Noem introduced final week that the Trump administration could be pausing the range visa lottery program. In a publish on X, she mentioned the person accused of finishing up a lethal taking pictures at Brown College — and of killing an MIT professor — got here to the U.S. by this system in 2017 and was granted a inexperienced card. Whereas the cancellation would not influence these already within the nation, the lottery program faces an unsure future going ahead.
The White Home says scrapping prior authorized pathways and protections is a part of its objective.
“The Trump administration has finished extra to restrict migration, each unlawful and authorized, than any administration in historical past,” Karoline Leavitt, the White Home press secretary, mentioned throughout a press convention this fall. She touted all of the methods the administration has reduce off these avenues, together with by pausing and revoking visas.
“Having a visa in america shouldn’t be a proper. It’s a privilege and the secretary of state — in case you are deemed opposite to our nation’s overseas nationwide pursuits — has the correct to revoke that privilege.”
A have a look at canceled applications and permissions
Hours after being inaugurated, Trump signed an government order slashing a program created by the Biden administration to briefly enable the doorway of 530,000 migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela. The choice to finish this system was later upheld by the Supreme Court docket — paving the best way for people to be eligible for deportation.
The general public who entered the U.S. below this humanitarian parole hail from Haiti. Migrants below this system have pushed in opposition to the narrative that they’re abusing the system.

Non permanent protected standing, or TPS, supplies deportation safety and grants work permits to folks from particular nations affected by battle, pure disasters, political instability, or every other situation that makes the nation unsafe for its nationals to return to. Every nation’s designation can final six to 18 months on the discretion of the secretary of homeland safety.
Since January, the Homeland Safety Division has ended TPS for 10 nations. Right here is the breakdown, in accordance with DHS, of how many individuals have been affected:
The company moved ahead with ending TPS for about 3,800 Syrians, although that effort is presently stalled in court docket. Lawsuits have additionally impacted the termination of Venezuela’s TPS designation. Whereas this system has been terminated, sure beneficiaries will hold their TPS by October 2026.
The Trump administration argues that parole applications like TPS are supposed to be solely non permanent. However immigration advocates mentioned that whereas the federal government can, and has, ended country-specific designations previously, it usually should show that situations within the nation have improved.

Schulte, from FWD.us, factors to current feedback from Trump denigrating the state of affairs in nations like Afghanistan and Haiti, and actions in opposition to Venezuela, as proof that the U.S. doesn’t contemplate these nations notably improved or secure.
With every cancellation, DHS has provided financial incentives and a 60 days’ discover to go away the nation. DHS didn’t reply to questions on how many individuals have taken them up on the supply of a $1,000 money cost.
There are a number of pending lawsuits difficult the terminations of their TPS, and a few folks might be able to apply for different avenues for cover in opposition to deportation.
Eliminating CBP One, others
One other program that the Trump administration ended earlier this 12 months is CBP One, a cellular app that allowed migrants to make appointments to hunt asylum from contained in the U.S.
From 2023 to January 2025, greater than 936,000 folks have been allowed within the nation. It is unknown precisely how many individuals entered the U.S. by the app and have been nonetheless ready on authorized permissions when it was canceled.
Within the spring, 1000’s of migrants who had entered the U.S. by the app and awaited asylum appointments acquired messages to go away. Many who entered with the app ended up getting detained in courthouses or of their neighborhoods.

Grebi Suárez, a Venezuelan barber who entered the U.S. by CBP One in January proper earlier than Trump was inaugurated, advised NPR that final week he lastly acquired his work allow and Social Safety quantity.
“However I am anxious and scared as a result of a few of my buddies have acquired emails from the federal government telling them to self-deport,” mentioned Suárez, who was featured on an NPR story final 12 months about his makes an attempt to get to the U.S.
The State Division has additionally assisted the administration’s objectives of canceling permissions to be within the U.S. This 12 months, 85,000 visas of all classes, together with greater than 8,000 scholar visas, have been revoked, in accordance with a State Division official. That’s greater than double the quantity the 12 months earlier than.
DUIs, assaults and theft are a number of the high the explanation why visas have been revoked, collectively accounting for nearly half of the revocations previously 12 months, the official mentioned in a press release.
“These are individuals who pose a direct menace to our communities’ security, and we don’t need to have them in our nation,” the official mentioned.
Earlier this month, the administration additionally moved ahead with canceling the Household Reunification Parole of 14,000 folks, principally Central and South People. This system sought to make it simpler for folks with family-based petitions to be permitted to be within the U.S. whereas their immigration processes performed out.
Migrants brace for extra cancellations in 2026
A number of thousand extra migrants are liable to their applications ending subsequent 12 months.
Different TPS permissions that expire subsequent 12 months are for El Salvador, Lebanon, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen. If their applications, together with Ukraine’s, get canceled, the U.S. could have nobody residing below such a short lived standing for the primary time because the program was created in 1990.
Ukrainians who got here below the Uniting for Ukraine parole program have been involved their program may very well be subsequent in line for cancellation. TPS for Ukrainians, which allowed about 100,000 folks to enter the U.S., additionally is ready to run out subsequent 12 months except the administration renews it.
The Trump administration earlier this 12 months paused the Uniting for Ukraine program and later resumed it. The pause affected 1000’s of Ukrainians, together with Viktoriia Panova.
Her work allow expired in February, including to the nervousness and uncertainty she’s felt because the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
“Ukrainians, we can not create any plans for our lives due to this case,” Panova advised NPR earlier this 12 months. “We can not reside a full life.”