Trump administration seeks to ramp up denaturalization of some US citizens, New York Times reports

ReutersReuters

Trump administration seeks to ramp up denaturalization of some US citizens, New York Times reports

Reuters

Wed, December 17, 2025 at 10:45 PM UTC

1 min read

FILE PHOTO: Melissa W. Maxim shakes hands and offers a Certificate of Citizenship to a new American citizen at the Glacier Point amphitheater in Yosemite National Park, California, U.S., September 17, 2025. REUTERS/Tracy Barbutes/File Photo

WASHINGTON, Dec 17 (Reuters) - The Trump administration intends to increase its efforts to strip some naturalized Americans ​of their U.S. citizenship, the New York Times ‌reported on Wednesday, citing internal guidance.

The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services ‌guidance, which was issued on Tuesday, asks its field offices to "supply Office of Immigration Litigation with 100-200 denaturalization cases per month" in the upcoming 2026 fiscal year, according to the ⁠newspaper.

That would mark ‌a dramatic increase in denaturalization cases, which, according to the Immigrant Legal Resource Center, stood ‍at about 11 per year between 1990 and 2017.

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Under U.S. law, a person can be denaturalized for several reasons, including illegally ​gaining U.S. citizenship and misrepresenting a material fact during ‌the naturalization process.

The timeline for denaturalization cases varies, but they can take years to resolve.

A USCIS spokesperson said it was not a secret that the agency's "war on fraud" prioritized people who unlawfully obtained U.S. citizenship, particularly under the ⁠previous administration.

"We will pursue denaturalization ​proceedings for those individuals lying or ​misrepresenting themselves during the naturalization process," the spokesperson said.

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U.S. President Donald Trump has carried out an ‍aggressive immigration agenda, ⁠including imposing travel bans and an attempt to end birthright citizenship, since January.

His administration most recently paused ⁠immigration applications, including green card and U.S. citizenship processing, filed by ‌immigrants from 19 non-European countries.

(Reporting by Jasper Ward ‌in WashingtonEditing by Rod Nickel)

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