Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Trump Administration Closes the Green Card Adjustment Loophole: Temporary Visitors Must Return Home

 This week the Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) issued a decisive policy memorandum that restores the original intent of American immigration law. Adjustment of status — the process allowing temporary visa holders to obtain a green card without leaving the United States — will now be treated as the rare, discretionary act of administrative grace it was always meant to be, not a routine shortcut.

Most applicants will be required to return to their home countries and pursue consular processing through a U.S. embassy or consulate. uscis.gov

This long-overdue reform strikes a blow against years of lax enforcement that turned temporary entry into a de facto path to permanent residency.

USCIS Spokesman Zach Kahler stated it clearly: “Nonimmigrants, like students, temporary workers, or people on tourist visas, come to the U.S. for a short time and for a specific purpose. Our system is designed for them to leave when their visit is over. Their visit should not function as the first step in the Green Card process.” uscis.gov

Enforcing the Rule of Law

For too long, the immigration system has operated under a wink-and-nod approach. Foreign nationals enter on temporary visas with the explicit understanding that they will depart at the end of their authorized stay. Instead, many filed for adjustment of status (Form I-485) while remaining in the country, effectively converting temporary permission into a backdoor to permanent residence. This undermined the distinction between immigrant and nonimmigrant intent that Congress built into the Immigration and Nationality Act.

The new memo reaffirms that adjustment of status under INA Section 245 is not an entitlement. It is “a matter of discretion and administrative grace” and an “extraordinary relief” that allows applicants to bypass the normal consular visa process. Officers must now evaluate each case on the totality of circumstances, weighing factors like immigration compliance, ties to the home country, employment history, and whether approval serves the best interests of the United States. uscis.gov

This policy directly addresses a core conservative principle: sovereignty means controlling who enters and stays in the country. When temporary visitors treat the U.S. as a launchpad for permanent settlement, it erodes public trust, strains resources, and disadvantages American workers and lawful immigrants who follow the rules.

Practical Benefits of the Change

  • Reduces Overstays and Enforcement Burden: Requiring most applicants to process abroad makes it harder for those denied to remain illegally.

As Kahler noted, this approach “reduces the need to find and remove those who decide to slip into the shadows.” uscis.gov

  • Frees USCIS Resources: Domestic adjustments have consumed significant agency capacity. Shifting routine cases to the State Department allows USCIS to prioritize higher-value work, such as naturalizations, victim visas, and other mission-critical tasks.
  • Deters Visa Abuse: It discourages entrants who arrive with preconceived plans to stay permanently, reinforcing that visas like B-1/B-2 tourist or F-1 student are not immigrant visas.
  • Protects American Interests: By making the process more deliberate, the policy gives consular officers abroad — who often have better insight into an applicant’s true circumstances — a stronger role. It also mitigates risks of fraud and chain migration.

Critics on the left are already decrying “family separations” and “backlogs,” but these complaints ignore reality. Consular processing has been the default path for decades.
The current administration is simply ending the exception that became the rule.

Dual-intent categories like certain H-1B workers may still receive favorable consideration, but even there, adjustment is not automatic. quarles.com

A Return to Common Sense

President Trump’s team is delivering on promises to restore order at the border and in the legal immigration system. This memo is not anti-immigrant — it is pro-legal immigration done the right way. Lawful permanent residency is a privilege, not a right, and it should go to those who respect America’s laws from the start.

Americans have every right to expect their government to enforce clear distinctions: temporary means temporary. Those who wish to immigrate permanently should follow the established pathways without gaming the system.

This policy is a strong first step toward an immigration system that puts American citizens and legal residents first. Expect more reforms to follow as the administration continues draining the swamp of outdated loopholes.

https://gatewayhispanic.com/2026/05/trump-administration-closes-green-card-adjustment-loophole-temporary/

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