The Trump administration is dramatically expanding efforts to revoke citizenship from foreign-born Americans as part of its broader immigration restrictions strategy. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services has deployed experts to field offices nationwide and reassigned staff members to investigate whether naturalized citizens could be denaturalized, according to two people familiar with the initiative.
The scope of this expansion represents a significant departure from historical precedent. The administration has established a target of identifying 100 to 200 denaturalization cases monthly, compared to the 102 total cases formally filed throughout Trump’s entire first term. This represents an approximately 12-fold increase in case generation targets.
Decentralized strategy for systematic investigation
Officials concluded that distributing denaturalization experts across USCIS’s 80-plus field offices nationwide would be more effective than previous approaches. This decentralized strategy enables systematic review of naturalized citizens processed through those offices to identify potential denaturalization candidates.
The Justice Department has simultaneously instructed attorneys to prioritize denaturalization cases and provided guidance on categories to target. These range from individuals who pose national security risks or have committed war crimes, to those convicted of Medicare or Medicaid fraud, to a broad catch-all provision for any other cases deemed sufficiently important.
Historical context and legal standards
Denaturalization cases have historically been rare and typically involved individuals who concealed criminal histories or previous human rights violations during citizenship applications. Past administrations, both Democratic and Republican, pursued such cases, but they remained exceptional.
The Justice Department reports that the Trump administration secured 86 denaturalization victories during its first term, while the Biden administration won 54 cases. The current trajectory suggests significantly higher numbers.
Approximately 800,000 people become naturalized citizens annually. To qualify, applicants must be over 18, hold legal permanent resident status, demonstrate English proficiency, possess knowledge of U.S. history and civics, and establish good moral character.
Official justification for the expansion
USCIS officials have characterized the initiative as addressing fraud within naturalization processes. The agency maintains that it pursues denaturalization proceedings against individuals who misrepresented themselves during applications. Officials argue the effort aims to ensure only those meeting citizenship standards retain their citizenship status.
However, the dramatic expansion and new case quotas have raised questions about whether the initiative extends beyond traditional fraud prosecutions into broader targeting of naturalized citizens.
Broader policy context
This denaturalization expansion occurs within wider Department of Homeland Security actions targeting immigrants. These include mass deportation operations in U.S. cities, revocation of thousands of visas—including for individuals who participated in pro-Palestinian protests—and attempts to deport green card holders.
Trump has consistently expressed preoccupation with citizenship definitions. He has separately sought constitutional authority to strip citizenship from individuals born in the United States to foreign parents, challenging the 14th Amendment’s birthright citizenship provision currently before the Supreme Court. Communications from the president have indicated intentions to remove individuals not deemed economically beneficial to the country and denaturalize immigrants perceived as disrupting domestic stability.
Expert concerns about scope and impact
Former USCIS officials and immigration policy analysts have raised significant concerns about the initiative’s scope and consequences. The denaturalization process involves substantial legal hurdles and typically requires years of litigation. Even when investigations proceed, subsequent deportation can require additional years.
Immigration law experts emphasize that denaturalization should remain exceptional rather than routine enforcement activity. They point out that the dramatic increase in case quotas represents fundamental change in how the government approaches this enforcement tool.
Emerging practical impacts
Immigration attorneys report growing concerns about the initiative’s psychological and practical effects. Legal aid organizations note that some clients with pending naturalization applications were denied based on tax debt despite payment plan participation. Immigration officers appear to require heightened proof of good moral character, demanding evidence of positive attributes including family caregiving, educational attainment, stable employment, and community involvement.
Legal observers warn that the initiative’s broader impact extends beyond successful denaturalizations. Even unsuccessful investigations create substantial financial and emotional burden on targets, requiring legal representation and document production. The broader climate of uncertainty and fear created within naturalized citizen communities represents a significant consequence of the policy.
Current trajectory and legislative expansion
In Trump’s second term, 16 denaturalization cases have been filed as of February 2026, with the administration winning seven. These include a case involving a United Kingdom-born individual convicted of receiving and distributing sexually explicit images of children.
Republican lawmakers have introduced legislation that would expand denaturalization grounds to include anyone convicted of serious felonies within 10 years of citizenship or found to have committed fraud against the government or joined terrorist organizations. This would further broaden the scope of potential denaturalization beyond current precedent.

