President Donald Trump announced a controversial new immigration policy this month, saying his administration plans to revoke the U.S. citizenship of naturalized immigrants who are convicted of defrauding American citizens. The remarks, made during a speech in Detroit, have sparked debate about law, policy, and constitutional protections.
What Trump Has Proposed
Speaking at the Detroit Economic Club, Trump said the administration intends to strip citizenship from any naturalized immigrant — including those from Somalia or “anywhere else” — if they are convicted of defrauding U.S. citizens. Trump portrayed this as part of broader efforts to clamp down on fraud and strengthen immigration enforcement.
He stated that people who come to the United States and then commit fraud would face severe consequences, including losing their citizenship and being removed from the country.
Legal Context: What the Law Currently Allows
Under U.S. law, citizenship can sometimes be revoked, but only under specific conditions tied to fraud in the naturalization process itself — for example, lying on immigration paperwork or concealing information during the application. In a 2017 Supreme Court case, Maslenjak v. United States, the Court ruled that citizenship cannot be revoked for immaterial falsehoods; the fraud must have been relevant to obtaining citizenship.
Another key precedent, Afroyim v. Rusk, established that the U.S. government generally cannot strip citizenship from a naturalized or native-born American unless the person voluntarily relinquishes it. This ruling reflects the strong constitutional protections afforded to citizenship under the Fourteenth Amendment.
Legal experts have noted that implementing Trump’s proposal in its broad form would face significant constitutional and legal challenges, because current law limits denaturalization to cases involving fraud tied directly to how citizenship was obtained, not crimes committed after naturalization.
Who Would Be Affected?
Trump’s comments singled out immigrants from Somalia as an example, but the policy — as described — would apply to any naturalized U.S. citizen convicted of defrauding citizens, regardless of their country of origin.
This focus comes amid ongoing federal investigations into allegations of fraud in some communities, including a high-profile inquiry in Minnesota involving Somali residents; however, the administration’s remarks were broader than any single case.
Reaction and Controversy
Trump’s stance has drawn both support and criticism:
- Supporters argue that those who commit serious crimes after being granted citizenship should face the most severe penalties, including loss of status.
- Critics, including legal scholars, warn that such a policy could violate constitutional rights and established Supreme Court precedent protecting citizenship. They argue citizenship cannot simply be rescinded as punishment for criminal conduct not directly tied to the naturalization process.
Civil liberties organizations have also raised concerns that broad denaturalization could set a dangerous precedent, potentially undermining the stability of citizenship for many immigrants who have made long-term lives in America.
What’s Next
If Trump’s administration attempts to implement this policy formally — for example through executive orders or rule changes — it is likely to face legal challenges in federal courts. Judges would be expected to consider constitutional protections, Supreme Court precedent, and statutory limits on denaturalization.
Until then, Trump’s remarks remain a policy announcement and political stance rather than an immediately enforceable law.
In Summary
President Trump has vowed that his administration will pursue revoking the citizenship of naturalized immigrants convicted of fraud, calling it part of a broader push against fraud and immigration violations. While existing laws do allow for denaturalization in cases of fraud tied to naturalization itself, broader revocation tied to later crimes faces complex legal barriers and constitutional safeguards.