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www.desitalkchicago.com – that’s all you need to know 4 ANALYSIS April 3, 2026 Under Trump, Legal Immigration To U.S. Is Falling From Most Countries, Especially India And China T he United States issued about a quarter million fewer visas in the first eight months of 2025 compared with the same period in 2024, as the Trump adminis- tration introduced policies that have reshaped who comes to the United States legally. From January to August 2025, the State Department approved 11 per- cent fewer permanent resident and temporary visas compared with the same period a year before, according to State Department data released in early March. These visas are generally issued for students, workers, and family members of citizens and legal residents. The 11 percent drop doesn’t include tourist visas, which also fell during the same period. India and China bore the brunt of the visa declines. The U.S. issued many fewer temporary visas to international students, cultural exchange visitors, and fiancés and spouses of U.S. citizens from those countries and beyond. Visa approvals for permanent residency – known as green cards – also declined, with the largest drops in visas for workers, certain relatives, and Iraqi and Afghan nationals who worked with the U.S. military. Most nations sent fewer immigrants to the United States. In a group of 61 countries with at least 5,000 visa approvals from January to August 2024, just seven received more visas in 2025 than the year before. The Trump administration’s travel ban, a pause on student visa interviews and heightened vetting requirements have all played a role in dampening visa figures. Plus, fewer State Department workers were available to process visas due to federal government cuts. The preliminary visa data helps paint a fuller picture of immigration declines in the United States. For the first time in at least half a century, more immigrants left the country than entered last year, according to estimates released by Brook- ings Institution, contributing to weaker job creation in recent months, as Federal Reserve Chair Jerome H. Powell noted last week. “There’s no policy more important to the present and future of the U.S. economy than immigration,” said Harvard University professor Jason Furman, who served as a top economist in the Obama administration. “When we restrict im- migration, we don’t just shortchange labor force growth today, we also reduce innovation and productivity growth in the future.” In a statement to TheWashington Post, State Department spokesman Tommy Pigott said: “A visa is a privilege, not a right. Unlike the Biden administration, President Trump is not willing to compro- mise the safety of American citizens to allow mass migration of unvetted foreign nationals into our country.” White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said in a statement that “Presi- dent Trump was elected with a resounding mandate to put American citizens first and every policy decision he’s made has reflected that priority.” Visas for Chinese and Indian nationals fell by about 84,000 compared with the same period in 2024, largely reflecting a drop-off in international students and workers from those countries. Visas for Afghan and Cuban nationals also dropped sharply, reflecting the Trump administra- tion’s travel ban, which began in June. Visas also fell by more than 10,000 for citizens of the Philippines and Vietnam. In June, the administration enacted a travel ban on 19 countries – mostly majority-Muslim countries and those with a contentious relationship with the United States, such as Cuba. Around that time, the State Department also paused student and exchange visitor visa interviews for three weeks, before ordering the vetting of social media accounts for all those seeking for visas. Meanwhile, the Trump administration began eliminating thousands of positions from the State Department, describing the reductions as an effort to root out “bloat” and inefficiency. Combined with expanded vetting requirements, staffing reductions resulted in fewer consular appointments and longer wait times at certain high-demand consulates. It’s not clear exactly how much the Trump administration’s policies and heightened immigration enforcement have directly reduced visa applications. But some foreigners could have been de- terred by Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric and canceled plans to come to the United States. “We don’t have a separation of how much of this decline is caused by demand and how much is caused by policy, and they’re obviously both putting downward pressure on the number of visas that are issued,” said Cecilia Esterline, an immi- gration analyst at the Niskanen Center, a moderate think tank inWashington. Business and tourism visas, which include those issued for leisure trip and business travel, fell by about 3.4 percent in the first eight months of 2025 compared with that period a year earlier, a drop of nearly 200,000 visas. Critics of the heightened restrictions say they limit the United States’ competi- tive edge in the global economy and cre- ate enormous uncertainty among families and workers that have been waiting, in some cases for decades, to come to the United States. “The Trump administration is using the power of the federal bureaucracy to grind the system to a halt, at least with respect to the people that are from countries that the administration finds to be dis-favor- able,” said Jorge Loweree, managing direc- tor of programs and strategy at the Ameri- can Immigration Council, a nonprofit that advocates for immigrant rights. Limiting visas helps prioritize Ameri- cans in the labor market and education system, said Ira Mehlman, a spokesperson for the Federation for American Immigra- tion Reform, which advocates for stricter immigration controls. “It’s good for employers if immigrants flood in, which is why they lobby for it. But it’s not so great for U.S. workers,” Mehlman said. “There seems to be this assumption that if foreign workers are not here, their economic output will sim- ply disappear. In most cases, those jobs would be filled by other workers, very often earning higher wages.” Visas issued for family members were generally down, especially for spouses and fiancés seeking temporary visas. However, permanent green cards for high-priority relatives of citizens, includ- ing young children, parents and spouses, increased by 6 percent for the first eight months of the year over the same period in 2024. Those green cards have no limits. A separate, capped family visa cat- egory, which includes adult children and siblings of U.S. citizens, fell by more than 27 percent, or by about 44,000. International students have been the hardest hit by the Trump administration’s clampdown on legal immigration. Visas issued to international students fell by more than 30 percent in the first eight months of 2025. The drop in student visas coincides with a statement by Marco Rubio in May that the State Department would “ag- gressively revoke” visas of students from China. Later in the summer, the State De- partment announced that it had canceled 6,000 student visas for alleged crimes and overstays. Meanwhile, exchange visitor visas, which are used by foreign medical residents to come to the United States, also fell by nearly 30,000. Omar Mousa, a 31-year-old Palestin- ian who fled to Ireland during the Gaza War, received a job offer last year from an internal medicine residency at Marshall University inWest Virginia. But the State Department denied Mousa an exchange visitor visa this past summer based on doubts that he would return home to war-ravaged Gaza after he completed his program, a requirement of the visa. The residency program kept his offer open. But in August, the Trump admin- istration suspended visas for Palestin- ian passport holders, dashing Mousa’s dreams. “I can’t stop thinking about this,” Mousa said. “I wasn’t just someone who just found himself a job. I’ve spent $20,000 and five years of my life, preparing, just focusing on this.” Methodology The Post analyzed preliminary State Department visa issuance data for the first eight months of 2025, which was most recent available. The Post’s analysis of the overall data and the breakdown by coun- try omitted tourist and business visas, to avoid distorting underlying immigration trends for specific countries. Tourist and business visas include those issued for va- cations and leisure trips as well as shorter business trips, including conferences and trade fairs. -TheWashington Post By Lauren Kaori Gurley, Federica Cocco PHOTO:WHITE HOUSE President Donald J. Trump holds up a sample “Trump Gold Card” while speaking about a new immigration initiative during an event at the White House on Dec. 19, 2025, as administration officials stand behind him.
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