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Trump administration intensifies its denaturalization campaign to restore integrity to the citizenship process

The announcement represents a dramatic increase in federal government use of denaturalization, building on the process invoked by prior administrations

Published May 09, 2026
Trump administration intensifies its denaturalization campaign to restore integrity to the citizenship process
Trump administration intensifies its denaturalization campaign to restore integrity to the citizenship process

The Trump administration announced a significant expansion of its denaturalization campaign on Friday, a legal initiative aimed at revoking the U.S. citizenship of foreign-born American individuals accused of committing fraud or serious criminal activity to obtain their citizenship.

The Justice Department (DOJ) has begun filing cases in federal courts against roughly a dozen citizens. 

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These individuals are accused of serious crimes, including war crimes and sexual assault, as well as having alleged ties to terrorist organizations like al Qaeda and al Shabaab or involvement in foreign espionage. 

A notable case in this wave involves Victor Manuel Rocha, a former U.S. diplomat and ambassador.

The DOJ is seeking to strip his citizenship after he admitted to being a secret agent for Cuba for decades- a betrayal that began years before he was naturalized. 

The administration is reportedly setting internal goals to refer thousands of cases monthly, transitioning denaturalization from a rare legal tool to a more routine enforcement mechanism. 

The denaturalization process involves the Justice Department filing civil or criminal cases in federal court and trying to convince judges that someone’s citizenship should be terminated.

Regarding the denaturalization push, Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche stated that a significant number of US citizens obtained their status through means that should have disqualified them. 

He framed the administration's campaign as a necessary effort to address those who “shouldn't be citizens.” While addressing the 24 million naturalized citizens in the U.S., he emphasized that only a “very small percentage” are at risk.

“ We should disincentivize people from committing fraud when they’re going to become a citizen of this great country,” Blanche said.

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