Veterans who lack citizenship fear being swept up in Trump's deportations
A bipartisan bill aims to protect over 100,000 noncitizen veterans from deportation and ease citizenship application during military service, lawmakers say.
- Julio Torres, a U.S. Marine Corps veteran, fears deportation despite his service and green card residency after facing detention for drug-related charges under the Biden administration.
- The Trump administration's immigration policies put over 100,000 noncitizen veterans at risk of deportation, prompting concern among Democrats in Congress.
- Rep. Mark Takano introduced a bipartisan bill to help identify veterans among immigrants and ease their path to citizenship due to increased threats of deportation.
51 Articles
51 Articles
IE congressman introduces bill aimed at preventing deportation of veterans who lack citizenship
A proposed bill would require the Department of Homeland Security to identify whether immigrants are U.S. military veterans and provide them with an opportunity to apply for lawful immigration status.

Veterans who lack citizenship fear being swept up in Trump's deportations
Veterans like Julio Torres are often promised that military service will be a fast-track to U.S. citizenship for themselves and their family members.
Non-citizens who commit crimes could be deported
CARICOM’s full free movement does not give any person the right to stay in Barbados if they commit a crime. That has been made clear by Minister of Home Affairs and Information, Wilfred Abrahams. He was speaking on the Let’s Talk About It radio programme on Q 100.7 FM. Minister Abrahams added that those who are found guilty can apply to serve their sentence in their country of birth.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 70% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium