130 Organizations Urge Administration to Reverse Harmful Policies Attacking Refugee, Immigrant Communities

Refugee Council USA, Welcome With Dignity campaign, and the Evacuate Our Allies Steering Committee jointly led a broad coalition of 130 national, state, and local organizations in a letter to President Trump, urging the administration to immediately reverse the recent actions that have halted or severely restricted refugee, asylum, and visa processing, particularly for Afghans, Somalis, and nationals from the nineteen travel ban countries.

The letter expresses deep concern that these abrupt policy shifts – without transparency, evidence, or congressional oversight – are causing widespread fear, destabilizing families, skirting legal obligations, and undermining long-standing humanitarian commitments.

The organizations emphasize that collective punishment and vilification of Afghans, Somalis, refugees, asylum seekers, or immigrants writ large is not sound national security policy, and it does nothing to make our communities safer.

They call on the administration to restore normal processing, provide clear public guidance, and uphold the United States’ legal and moral obligations to people seeking protection. 

Read the full letter here.

Trump Plans to Cut Refugee Admissions to Record Low

President Trump is considering admitting far fewer refugees into the U.S. this year — as few as 7,500 — “a dramatic new low as the administration is conducting sweeping immigration raids as part of its mass deportation agenda,” the Associated Press reported.

The 7,500 figure is “a drastic decrease from the cap of 125,000 set by the Biden administration last year, according to a presidential determination dated Sept. 30 and signed by Mr. Trump,” the New York Times noted.

“The new limit would effectively shut the door to thousands of families waiting in camps around the world and refocus a program meant to provide sanctuary for those fleeing war and famine to support mostly white South Africans,” the Times reported.

Groups Urge Congress to Press Trump Administration to Set Robust Refugee Admissions Goal and Restore Humanitarian Protections

A total of 78 national, state, and local organizations representing refugee resettlement agencies, direct service providers, faith-based groups, and human rights advocates on Sept. 16 released a joint letter to Congress calling for urgent action to restore the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP) and protect the most at-risk and vulnerable refugees around the globe.

The letter comes in response to troubling signals from the administration ahead of the Fiscal Year 2026 (FY26) Presidential Determination (PD) on refugee admissions, amidst reports of discriminatory resettlement selection practices and significant cuts to refugee admissions with compelling protection needs, such as refugees already referred for U.S. resettlement, a news release related to the letter noted.

The letter urges Congress to exercise its appropriations and oversight authority and to pressure the administration to:

  • Fulfill its legal obligations under the Refugee Act by conducting meaningful consultations with Congress and setting the FY 2026 refugee admissions goal by October 1;
  • Set a refugee admissions goal of 125,000 for FY 2026, reflecting both the global scale of need and the more than 120,000 refugees conditionally approved for resettlement;
  • Prioritize the most vulnerable, at-risk, and long-waiting refugees, regardless of nationality, race, or religion;
  • Defend and expand federal investments in refugee processing, admissions, and resettlement infrastructure by restoring full access to basic healthcare, nutrition assistance, and social services for arriving refugees;

U.K. Home Secretary Suspends Refugee Family Reunion Applications

Yvette Cooper, the U.K. home secretary, “has been strongly criticised by refugee charities after announcing that she is suspending refugee family reunion applications – the system allowing people granted asylum to bring relatives to the UK – until new, tighter rules come into force next year,” reports the Guardian.

Cooper said the move “would mean refugees face the same restrictions as other migrants hoping to bring family to join them in the UK,” the BBC reported on its website. “This generally means someone must earn at least £29,000 a year and provide suitable accommodation, while their family member may need to demonstrate a basic level of English.”

Reuters Higlights Dangers to Migrants Crossing the Mediterranean Sea for Europe

Reuters recently published an article that weaves in the journey of a small rubber boat carrying 57 people who are trying to reach Europe from Libya into a broader narrative that highlights the continued dangers facing migrants who attempt to reach Europe via the Mediterranean Sea.

“The rubber dinghy was one of more than 1,300 migrant boats that ran into trouble while trying to reach Europe by sea last year, according to figures provided by Alarm Phone,” writes Joan FausMariano Zafra and Sudev Kiyada in their article.

The article highlights the Faustian bargain that European countries such as Italu have made with countries such as Libya, effectively handing off responsibility for reducing migration from Africa to countries that have documented cases of abuse of migrants.

Europe’s Economy Will Stall Without Migrants: Lagarde

The European Union’s economy “would have looked far weaker after the pandemic without foreign workers, European Central Bank chief Christine Lagarde said Saturday, warning policymakers not to ignore migration’s role even as it fuels political tensions,” reports Bartosz Brzezinski in Politico.

The ECB president “argued that migration has played a crucial role in offsetting Europe’s shrinking birth rate and growing appetite for shorter working hours,” the Politico story said.

“Migration could, in principle, play a crucial role in easing” labor shortages as native populations age, Lagarde said. But “political economy pressures may increasingly limit inflows,” she said, according to a report in Fortune.

Spain Welcomes Migrants with Open Arms

“At a time when many Western democracies are trying to keep immigrants out, Spain is boldly welcoming them in,” writes By Omar G. Encarnación, in a recent New York Times Op-Ed.

While the country’s low birthrate is one factor in its welcoming embrace of migrants that only tells part of the story, he notes. Spain’s “rich and complex history helps explain the relatively high level of tolerance for immigration among Spaniards.”

“Ultimately, however, Spain’s immigration politics owe most to the administration of Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, one of the last exponents of social democracy in Europe. Although decidedly liberal, Mr. Sánchez’s approach is far from an experiment with open borders. Instead, it’s as pragmatic as it is deliberate. It’s true he has built-in advantages not shared by other European leaders. But by marrying practical solutions to an uplifting message, he has provided a case study in how to build support for progressive immigration policies,” writes Encarnacion.

 Spain “is proving an important point: A generous immigration policy is not a threat to the nation or to a thriving economy. More than that, it is a resource for growth and renewal that Spain’s peers spurn at their cost,” he notes.

Italian Judges Again Block Meloni’s Plan to Hold Asylum Seekers in Albania

Italian judges on Friday “again denied the government’s request to hold asylum seekers in Albania while their cases are being processed, dealing another major setback to Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s anti-immigration policy,” the New York Times reported on Jan. 31.

Meloni “was berated by the political opposition on Saturday after her plan to process up to 3,000 asylum-seekers a month in Albania was rejected by Italian judges for a third time,” reported Politico.

Lawmakers Urge Rubio to Reverse Stop Work Orders for Refugee Groups

Key U.S. Representatives and Senators recently urged Secretary of State Marco Rubio to immediately revoke the stop work orders that the Department issued on January 24, 2025, to 10 national resettlement agencies.

“This unprecedented order threatens to deprive refugees already in the United States of the vital assistance known as Reception and Placement (R&P) services, which help them during their first three months in the United States as they rebuild their lives here,” the letter said.

The stop work orders “undermine legal obligations that the Department has entered into through its contracts with U.S.-based and intergovernmental organizations, increasing new arrivals’ vulnerability to homelessness and food insecurity at a time when they still have no lifeline for support,” the letter said.

The R&P program covers basic needs like rent, food, clothes, and furnishing
in the first few months after arrival, “providing core services for refugees who often resettle with nothing more than the clothes on their backs.” Barring R&P services, including Virtual R&P available to self-traveling Special Immigrant Visas (SIVs), “will cause undue and unnecessary suffering and hardship, breaking a promise we made to the refugees and SIVs when we approved them for resettlement in America.”