The Donald Trump administration has signaled plans to expand denaturalization efforts, a legal process that allows the U.S. government to revoke citizenship from naturalized Americans under specific circumstances, such as fraud or misrepresentation during the immigration process.
While officials argue the move enforces existing immigration law, civil-rights groups warn that broader use of denaturalization could create fear, uncertainty, and unequal enforcement across immigrant communities — particularly those from Africa, the Caribbean, and Latin America.
In this video, Lisa Cabrera breaks down:
• What denaturalization actually means under U.S. law
• Who can legally lose citizenship — and who cannot
• How often citizenship has been revoked historically
• Why immigrant advocacy groups are raising concerns
• What this could mean for families, workers, and future immigration policy
This discussion focuses on verified policy statements, legal precedent, and public records, not speculation.
📍 GEO Focus: United States — national immigration and civil-rights impact.
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