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US to revive rule that could deny green cards to immigrants using public benefits

By Thomson Reuters Jul 16, 2026 | 1:24 PM

July 16 (Reuters) – The U.S. government is reviving a rule that could deny permanent residency to immigrants who use ​public benefits such as food stamps ‌and Medicaid, the Department of Homeland Security said on Thursday.

The administration of President Donald Trump, determined to crack down on what it calls illegal ‌immigration, ​says people seeking green ⁠cards should not be “public ⁠charges” who are primarily dependent on government subsistence.

The change — announced in an official post by the DHS — will take effect ​on September 18 this year.

The original rule, adopted in 2019 during Trump’s first ⁠term in power, significantly ⁠expanded the definition of a ​public charge to include anyone who received a ​government benefit for more than 12 months ‌in any three-year period.

This broad approach was abandoned in 2022 during the Biden administration, which narrowed the grounds for potentially ⁠denying a green card to immigrants.

In a post on X, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services ⁠said the ‌revived rule underlined the intent “that ⁠aliens in the United States be ​self-reliant ‌and not dependent on taxpayer-funded ​government benefits.”

The ⁠original rule was heavily criticized by immigrant advocates who said it unfairly targeted poor people and would bar many people from obtaining permanent residency.

(Reporting by David Ljunggren; Editing by ​Andrea Ricci )