Trump says US will permanently pause migration from 'Third World Countries'
President Trump announced a permanent halt to migration from ‘Third World Countries,’ aiming to recover the U.S. system and terminate millions of Biden-era illegal admissions.
- On November 28, 2025, President Donald Trump wrote on Truth Social that `I will permanently pause migration from all Third World Countries to allow the U.S. system to fully recover`, posting the announcement late Thursday night.
- After a Wednesday shooting that killed a National Guard member, Trump moved to the immigration crackdown hours after announcing Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom’s death.
- Trump proposed a suite of immigration measures including ending federal benefits for noncitizens, denaturalizing some migrants, and Joseph Edlow, USCIS director, ordered reexamining green cards from 19 countries of concern.
- DHS and agencies have opened reviews, and legal challenges are emerging as the Department of Homeland Security reviews Biden-era asylum cases while experts warn deportations threaten nearly 31 million jobs held by foreign-born workers.
- Critics and analysts note that Trump’s post marks a new escalation in anti-migrant policy during his second term, while USCIS officials did not name specific countries and studies show immigrants are 60% less likely to be incarcerated.
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Trump Takes Decisive Action on Migration—Shows Europe That It Can Be Done
Germany’s response to a mass of crime committed by Afghan migrants under Chancellor Friedrich Merz—and, indeed, the establishment figures that came before him—has been to fly in more migrants from Afghanistan. But in the U.S., Donald Trump announced on Friday—just days after two members of the National Guard were shot in the head a few blocks away from the White House, allegedly by an Afghan asylum seeker—that the border is being widely shut dow…
INFOGRAPHIES - "I will permanently suspend immigration from all Third World countries," announced Donald Trump after the attack on two National Guards in Washington. Figaro has looked at the evolution of the American migration phenomenon in recent decades.
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