U.S. President Donald Trump is aggressively changing the U.S. immigration landscape. But many think the immigration changes being made are taking the country the wrong way. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
Getty Images
There’s a basic rule of good leadership, even when it comes to immigration. It consists of three essential requirements. They are: example, example, and example. Instead of providing us such examples, the Trump administration appears to be offering a master class in bad leadership. It claims to be enforcing “law and order” and “border security,” but it has abandoned the principle that people are entitled to due process and must be judged as individuals under the law. Instead, it relies on racial sorting, collective punishment, and the abuse of power disguised as providing “security.” In short, the administration’s choice of methods to pursue its stated goals too often has crossed the line into lawlessness. These negative instances have had real costs. They have eroded America’s moral authority, demonstrated that power outweighs principle, and driven away international talent from the United States just when it is needed most to keep America competitive in leading the world.
The Latest Example
A recent example of what is wrong is the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) decision to reduce the validity of Employment Authorization Documents (EADs). USCIS is decreasing the maximum validity of EADs from five years to just 18 months for asylees, those granted withholding of removal, applicants for adjustment of status, and those who seek suspension of deportation, cancellation of removal, or NACARA relief. For parolees, TPS holders, applicants, and spouses of entrepreneur parolees, H.R. 1 – the One Big Beautiful Bill Act – limits work authorization to one year or the end of parole, or TPS, whichever comes first.
The goal is “more frequent vetting” so that anyone who might “threaten public safety or promote harmful anti-American ideologies” can be removed. After an Afghan national shot two National Guard members in Washington, D.C., killing one and critically wounding another, Director Joseph Edlow cited that tragedy to justify suspecting millions of refugees, asylees, and long-term residents again. People who have already passed checks now have to prove they are not enemies repeatedly. That is not security; it is institutionalized xenophobia.
A “Permanent Pause” On Migration
The Thanksgiving-week shooting has also been used as the justification for a much wider crackdown. Within days, the government stopped all Afghan immigration applications, froze asylum decisions nationwide, and ordered a review of green cards and other benefits for nationals from 19 so-called “countries of concern.” On Truth Social, President Trump then pledged a “permanent pause” on migration from all “Third World countries,” language that closely aligns with the 19 mostly non-European nations already included in his earlier expanded travel ban.
On paper, the criteria appear technical: vetting, information-sharing, assessments of terrorism risk, overstay rates, and encouraging cooperation on deportations. In reality, they function as demographic filters. USCIS has been directed to treat these “country-specific facts and circumstances” as a “significant negative factor” in discretionary decisions – language that appears in the USCIS’s own policy memoranda. Because discretion influences adjustments, extensions, changes of status, and waivers—turning nationality into a permanent “negative factor” quietly biases the system against millions who have done nothing wrong.
Collective Punishment for Nothing
Reporting by The Washington Post reveals that the new rules halt all asylum decisions and require nationals from the 19 countries to undergo new interviews and security checks even after being approved. Civil rights groups, including the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) and its state branches, criticize the travel ban and “countries of concern” framework as overly broad and ideological. They argue that this ostensible “law and order” rule actually masks collective punishment based on nationality.
This moral failure carries a cost. International student enrolment at U.S. universities has fallen sharply. The Institute of International Education’s Fall 2025 Snapshot reports a 17% decrease in new enrolments and states that 96% of institutions now identify visa denials and delays as a major concern. NAFSA: Association of International Educators’ Fall 2025 International Student Enrolment Snapshot & Economic Impact estimates a $1.1 billion loss and nearly 23,000 jobs lost due to the decline.
A Slow-Motion Strategy To Nowhere
Instead of viewing international students and skilled workers as assets, Washington shifts their status to threats that require constant re-screening. EADs that once provided refugees, asylees, and adjustment applicants with 5 years of stability will now expire in 18 months, pushing families and employers into a cycle of instability marked by fees, paperwork, and fear. That is not effective border or immigration management. It is a slow-motion approach to losing the global race for top talent and a declining America.
That same contradiction persists in the labour market. The government is expanding and streamlining temporary guest-worker visas in agriculture and considering similar measures in other sectors. Stateline reports that farmers now have easier access to foreign labour, and a follow-up piece entitled “More industries want Trump’s help hiring immigrant labour after farms get a break” shows restaurants, construction, and landscaping industries are also seeking similar exemptions. However, long-term temporary workers face increasingly difficult barriers to obtaining or maintaining permanent status. The result is that in Smith County, Texas, and other places, business and civic leaders are urging the sheriff to end his 287(g) agreement to cooperate with ICE because fear is driving away much-needed workers and customers.
Mega Detention Centers
Behind these policies, an expanding detention system is growing. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is shopping around for warehouse space to create “mega detention centres.” Leaked ICE data reveals that nearly three-quarters of their detainees have no criminal convictions. The case of Venezuelans as an example, demonstrates how this machinery influences foreign policy: because the country is on the “countries of concern” list and is mentioned in the 2025 proclamation and USCIS memo, its nationals face partial travel bans, frozen applications, and threats to lawful status based solely on nationality.
Some business and political leaders still hope to secure tax cuts and deregulation while treating immigration practices as background scenery. They are misjudging the risks. There is clear economic loss – fewer foreign students, fewer skilled workers, fewer consumers, and more severe labour shortages – as documented in academic reports and business media coverage. There is also legal uncertainty: when lawful applications can be frozen en masse and settled green cards reopened after a single incident or a presidential outburst, the United States is increasingly resembling a less predictable, emerging market country where deals are never truly final.
An Ethical Collapse
Above all, there is an ethical collapse. For generations, America’s claim to leadership relied on a simple idea: this was a nation of laws, open to talent from anywhere as long as you played by the rules. Today, from “extreme vetting” of refugees and asylees to warehouse detentions and racialized travel bans, the American message is different: your worth is based on your birthplace and your religion, and your rights last only until the next headline. And the example is being set in the conduct of the leaders in the White House.
A great power that treats people as inventory and allies as bargaining chips not only betrays its values. It also erodes its competitive edge. Immigration leadership and ethics are not mere sentimental extras. They serve as the guardrails that keep a country from going the wrong way on a one-way street headed nowhere. Better leadership and a respect for ethics are what America once enjoyed. They are what America needs again. They are certainly needed in the area of immigration if anywhere.
Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/andyjsemotiuk/2025/12/08/is-poor-immigration-leadership–taking-america-down-a-road-to-nowhere/


