spot_img
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
spot_img
spot_img

New Obama directive will shorten visa wait for illegal aliens with U.S. spouses

An estimated hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants married toย  U.S. citizens will soon have an opportunity to become legal residents without having to serve a years-long punishment.

President Obama proposed the policy change in January 2012 and it is scheduled to go into effect March 4.

- Advertisement -

The change was proposed to end situations in which illegal-immigrant spouses (and often parents) haveย to returnย to their native countries toย  serve the โ€œban of admissionโ€ โ€“ as long as 10 years for staying illegally in the United States for more than a year.

Applicants must show that leaving the U.S. for an extended period would create โ€œextreme hardshipโ€ on their legal spouse, like having to cope with a major illness or caring for a special-needs child.

- Advertisement -

Under the process, applicants would still have to first prove to the federal government that they are in a legitimate marriage. Then they canย applyย for the waiver without leaving the U.S.

If the waiver is approved, the applicants canย returnย to their native country to go through a green-cardย interviewย process, thenย returnย to the U.S. to wait for weeks โ€“ not years โ€“ for the waiver approval.ย  Once the waiver is approved, they canย applyto the State Department for a visa.

The 10-year punishment is part of law passed by Congress in 1996 to discourage illegal immigration.

The president made the policy changes ahead of his second-term effort to pass comprehensive illegal-immigration reform.

On Tuesday, he detailed a plan that would provide a path to citizenship that also includes improved border security, an overhaul of the legal immigration system and helping businesses verify the legal status of workers.

Obama made the announcement one day before a bipartisan group of senators proposed a similar plan, except that it ties citizenship more directly to border security.

The president last year also issued a directive that suspends deportation for many young illegal immigrants brought to the U.S. as children by their parents.

Though the president has suggested his policy changes are to reduce hardships on families with illegal immigrants, his waiver and other directives have drawn some criticism.

โ€œItโ€™s allowing people to avoid this penalty,โ€ Jessica Vaughan, director of policy studies for the Washington-based Centerย for Immigrationย Studies, told Theย Arizona Republic.

Source:Fox News

Comment on the article

- Advertisement -spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Latest Articles