
Part A: Provide an overview of the Trump administration’s immigration policies.
Since taking office in January 2025, the Trump administration has implemented a series of sweeping immigration policies designed to prioritize “national security, public safety, and American workers.” These actions represent a significant shift toward a “zero-tolerance” framework, focusing on mass deportation, restricted legal pathways, and enhanced border infrastructure.

1. Executive Actions and “National Invasion” Framework
On January 20, 2025, President Trump issued several foundational executive orders:
- “Protecting the American People Against Invasion”: Directed the DHS to use all available resources—including the military—to execute the removal of inadmissible and removable aliens.
- “Guaranteeing the States Protection Against Invasion”: Invoked Constitutional authorities (Article IV, Section 4) to restrict asylum eligibility and permit faster deportations.
- Universal Registration: Reinstated and strictly enforced the requirement for all non-citizens (ages 18+) to carry proof of registration at all times, with parents responsible for the registration of minors.
2. Enforcement and Mass Deportation Strategy
The administration has shifted from targeted enforcement to a broader mandate:
- Deportation Operations: Launched major initiatives such as “Operation Midway Blitz” and “Operation Tidal Wave” to arrest and remove criminal aliens. A public webpage called “Worst of the Worst” (wow.dhs.gov) was created to track high-priority removals.
- Project Homecoming: An initiative encouraging “self-deportation” by offering incentives, such as a $1,000 stipend and free flights for illegal aliens who voluntarily depart using the new “CBP Home” app.
- Expanded Detention: Partnered with several states (Florida, Indiana, Nebraska, Louisiana) to rapidly expand detention capacity in facilities with names like “Alligator Alcatraz” and “Louisiana Lockup.”

3. Border Security and “The Wall”
The administration claims a 93% decrease in illegal border crossings year-over-year:
- Big Beautiful Bill Act: Provided $37 billion in funding to resume construction of the southern border wall, with over 85 miles under construction or planned within the first year.
- End of Parole: Terminated the practice of “categorical parole” for specific nationalities (Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans) and shifted to a strictly case-by-case review.
- Zero Releases: As of late 2025, the administration reported seven consecutive months of zero parole releases by CBP.
4. Overhaul of Legal Immigration and Visas
Significant changes have been made to high-skilled and humanitarian visa categories:
- H-1B Visa Reform:
- $100,000 Fee: New H-1B petitions filed on or after September 21, 2025, are subject to a $100,000 eligibility fee.
- Wage-Weighted Selection: The random lottery was replaced with a system that prioritizes higher-paid and higher-skilled applicants (effective February 2026).
- $100,000 Fee: New H-1B petitions filed on or after September 21, 2025, are subject to a $100,000 eligibility fee.
- Termination of TPS: Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem terminated Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for numerous countries, including Afghanistan, Burma, Ethiopia, Haiti, and Venezuela, citing that conditions in those nations no longer warrant temporary protection.
- Enhanced Vetting: Implemented mandatory social media vetting for H-1B, student (F/M), and exchange (J) visa applicants, requiring public online footprints to be maintained for review.

5. Asylum and Refugee Programs
The administration has fundamentally restricted humanitarian entry:
- Refugee Ceiling: Set the 2026 refugee admission ceiling at 7,500, one of the lowest in U.S. history.
- Asylum Fees: Introduced a $100 application fee for asylum seekers, though some annual fees were modified late in the year.
- Re-checking Cases: USCIS began re-reviewing refugee cases admitted between January 2021 and February 2025.
Summary of Impact (2025)
| Category | Policy Change |
| Border | 93% drop in crossings; $37B for wall construction. |
| Interior | 622,000+ removals; 1,000+ local law enforcement partnerships. |
| Skilled Labor | $100,000 H-1B fee; transition from lottery to wage-based selection. |
| Humanitarian | TPS ended for 11+ nations; refugee cap cut to 7,500. |

Part B: Analyze the hidden intentions behind the Trump administration’s anti-immigration policies.
While the Trump administration publicly frames its hardline immigration policies as “securing the border” and “restoring order,” a deeper analysis reveals a multilayered set of hidden intentions spanning political, economic, and ideological dimensions.
1. Political Power Consolidation and Executive Expansion
The administration uses the “National Invasion” framework to justify the maximization of executive authority.
- Bypassing Checks and Balances: By invoking Article IV, Section 4 of the Constitution (protection against invasion), the administration attempts to bypass traditional judicial reviews and legislative hurdles to deploy the military or conduct expedited removals.
- Base Mobilization: By centering “America First” as a core value, these policies serve to demonstrate decisive action to the core constituency, maintaining political momentum for future elections and legislative battles.

2. Economic Protectionism and Fiscal Restructuring
Immigration restrictions are designed to act as a catalyst for restructuring the U.S. labor market and public finances.
- Labor Market Transformation: Imposing a $100,000 fee on H-1B visas and moving to wage-based selection is a deliberate tactic to force corporations to abandon their reliance on low-cost foreign labor and increase wages for American workers.
- Reduction of Social Spending: Strictly limiting eligibility for public benefits (such as Medicaid) for non-citizens aims to offset federal deficits created by tax cuts, establishing a structure that only welcomes “fiscally self-sufficient” immigrants.

3. Ideological Redesign of “American Identity”
A significant, and highly controversial, intent is the cultural engineering of what it means to be American.
- Vetting as an Ideological Filter: Mandatory social media screening and using “anti-American” speech as grounds for deportation turn immigration policy into a tool for political and ideological gatekeeping. This allows the administration to target specific groups, such as participants in certain protests or vocal critics of the administration.
- Civilizational Approach: Restricting immigration from specific regions while favoring those who “align with Western values” reflects a desire to freeze or shift the demographic and cultural trajectory of the United States.

4. Strategic Leverage and Inducing “Self-Deportation”
The administration applies psychological and strategic pressure to manage the logistical and financial burden of mass deportations.
- Cost-Effective Removal: Initiatives like “Project Homecoming,” which offer stipends for voluntary departure, are calculated moves to achieve high removal numbers without the astronomical legal and physical costs associated with forced deportation.
- The Policy of Deterrence through Fear: “Zero Release” and indefinite detention policies are designed to send a powerful message to potential migrants: that entering the U.S. illegally leads only to hardship, thereby attempting to stop the flow at the source through psychological warfare.

Summary of Hidden Intentions
| Hidden Intent | Primary Mechanism | Anticipated Effect |
| Expansion of Power | Executive Orders & Military Deployment | Neutralization of judicial oversight; centralized control. |
| Fiscal Consolidation | Benefit restrictions; high visa fees | Federal budget savings and “selective immigration.” |
| Political Purging | Social media vetting; ideological tests | Ensuring an immigrant population aligned with the administration’s values. |
| Labor Reform | H-1B quota and cost adjustments | Forced hiring of American workers; upward pressure on wages. |

__________________
The American Newspaper
www.americannewspaper.org
Published: December 28, 2025, (12/28/2025) at 10:48 A.M.
[Source/Notes]
This article was written/produced using AI Gemini. Written/authored entirely by Gemini itself. The editor made no revisions. The model used was Gemini 3.0. Images were were made/produced using both ChatGPT and Gemini.)
[Prompt History/Draft]
1. “Provide an overview of the Trump administration’s immigration policies.” (Part A).
2. “Analyze the hidden intentions behind the Trump administration’s anti-immigration policies.” (Part B).
[Advertisement]
[Book Purchase Link] Autocrats vs. Democrats: China, Russia, America, and the New Global Disorder (Hardcover – October 28, 2025 by Michael McFaul (Author)).
[Book Purchase Link] Rewiring Democracy: How AI Will Transform Our Politics, Government, and Citizenship (Strong Ideas) Hardcover – October 21, 2025.
[Recommended, legally compliant English disclosure]: “As an Amazon Associate, The American Newspaper website earns from qualifying purchases”, “This post contains affiliate links. The American Newspaper website may earn a commission from purchases made through the link above at no extra cost to you.”
(The End).