DACA Recipients Could Gain H-1B Visas Under New Immigration Policy
President Joe Biden announced a new immigration policy that could allow DACA recipients greater access to H-1B visas and other employment paths.
President Joe Biden announced a new immigration policy that could allow DACA recipients greater access to H-1B visas and other employment paths.
Biden announced an executive action to protect about half a million undocumented spouses of American citizens from deportation.
In Campos-Chaves v. Garland, Supreme Court found that the noncitizens received adequate notice of the removal hearings that they missed and at which they were ordered removed so that they can’t seek rescission of their removal orders issued in their absence on the basis of defective notice.
State Department conducted a temporary pilot program to allow H1B visa holders to pick up their visa in the United States.
Get ready for a groundbreaking announcement tomorrow from the President! In a historic move, the President’s executive action will offer much-needed protection and opportunities for undocumented spouses of U.S. citizens.
President Biden’s administration is seriously considering to create temporary legal status and a path to American citizenship for thousands of immigrants living in the U.S. illegally.
On June 4, 2024, the Biden Administration issued a Presidential Proclamation with immediate implementation on the border, putting historically restrictive measures in place that will bar access to asylum for most people who enter the United States between ports of entry at the southern border.
Oklahoma recently passed an anti-immigrant law. Federal government filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma seeking to “preserve its exclusive authority under federal law to regulate the entry, reentry, and presence of noncitizens,” arguing that Oklahoma’s House Bill 4156, like Texas’s preliminarily enjoined Senate Bill 4 and Iowa’s recently enacted Senate File 2340, impermissibly creates a state-specific immigration system that seeks to regulate noncitizens’ entry, reentry, and presence in the United States.
Manuel Guerra Vasquez has been deported to Mexico before, but each time he returned to Texas.
The U.S. Department of Justice has sued two more states this month to prevent them from implementing new state laws targeting immigrants.