(UNITED STATES) The Trump administration has moved at high speed in 2025 to roll out what officials call a new border security framework and what advocates describe as the most sweeping anti-asylum laws in decades. Since January 20, 2025, the government has closed access to ports of entry for people seeking protection, reinstated the Migrant Protection Protocols, suspended the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP), and expanded fast-track deportations across the United States. A partial court block in July slowed one piece of the package, but most restrictions still stand pending appeal.
The practical effect is immediate and stark. Asylum seekers who arrive at the southern border without a scheduled slot in the rebranded “CBP Home” system are being turned back or quickly deported. Those who “manifest” fear may face a tougher screening for limited forms of protection that do not lead to a green card. Families are split by a web of new bars and fees. And refugees abroad remain in limbo after USRAP was halted by presidential order on January 27, 2025.

According to administration statements, these steps are aimed at national security, public safety, and managing resources during high migration. Advocacy groups, faith-based agencies, and many legal scholars say the measures conflict with U.S. law and treaty promises. They warn of wrongful returns to danger, expanded family separation, and rising deaths near the border. VisaVerge.com reports that the policy design—especially encounter thresholds and the inclusion of unaccompanied children in counts—makes the bans hard to unwind in practice.
Policy shifts since January 2025
The new architecture rests on layered restrictions introduced rapidly after inauguration day.
- On January 20, 2025, officials closed access to ports of entry for asylum and restarted the Migrant Protection Protocols (Remain in Mexico), forcing most asylum seekers to wait in Mexico while their U.S. immigration cases remain pending. Legal services and humanitarian support in border towns are scarce, and safety risks vary widely by location.
- The administration rebranded the CBP One app to “CBP Home,” a tool that now centers on voluntary self-deportation rather than scheduling asylum access.
- On January 27, 2025, the White House suspended refugee resettlement by halting USRAP except for narrow national-security exceptions. That order shut the door to new refugee admissions worldwide and left resettlement agencies unsure how long they can sustain operations without new arrivals.
A second phase in May and June 2025 introduced financial and procedural barriers:
- New asylum fees: $100 to file an application and $100 each year to keep a case pending.
- Fee waivers ended, creating a cash barrier many low-income applicants cannot meet.
- Officials began dismissing large numbers of pending asylum cases, which can cut off work eligibility and push people toward removal.
- On June 9, the administration set entry bans for certain nationalities, including Afghanistan, Myanmar, and Chad, with limited exceptions.
A July court action produced a partial check:
- In July 2025, a federal judge issued a temporary injunction against one executive order that denied asylum to those who crossed between ports of entry.
- The ruling affected a narrow slice of the package; the government has appealed and most major changes still stand for now.
Key operational changes and standards
The administration’s package includes sweeping procedural shifts that alter eligibility and enforcement:
- Expedited removal expansion: Anyone unable to prove two years of lawful U.S. presence can be deported immediately, even if they fear persecution.
- Summary expulsions: CBP officers can summarily expel people to Mexico without placing them in formal removal proceedings.
- Narrowed screenings: Only those who clearly express fear without prompting may receive a screening for withholding of removal or protection under the Convention Against Torture — protections that carry a higher legal standard and do not provide a path to permanent residency.
- Encounter thresholds: Broader asylum access is tied to a metric: bans remain until the 28-day average drops below 1,500 encounters. The count includes unaccompanied minors, making the threshold difficult to meet under current regional trends.
On-the-ground impacts
Closing ports of entry and expanding expedited procedures have reshaped life at the border in several concrete ways.
- People presenting at bridges or official crossings are often turned away.
- Those who cross irregularly face a complex set of bars that make them ineligible for asylum unless they meet narrow exceptions (for example, having sought protection in transit countries).
- Most would-be applicants are channeled into quick deportation, with minimal screening and almost no access to counsel while in CBP custody.
Financial and paperwork changes have secondary effects inside the U.S.:
- Fees and the loss of waivers create a major barrier. For example, a family of four could face hundreds of dollars annually just to keep cases pending, not counting work permit fees.
- Dismissed cases result in lost eligibility to renew work authorization, leading to lost jobs, delayed rent, and stress for families and local communities.
Military and enforcement presence:
- Military deployment to the border supports surveillance, logistics, and crowd control.
- Advocates say this blurs lines between civil processing and military presence and increases fear among families with small children.
Impacts for refugees overseas and select nationalities
- The USRAP suspension has halted a pathway that historically involved months of vetting and security checks. Resettlement agencies warn that vulnerable cases — including those with urgent medical needs or critical family ties in the U.S. — are at risk.
- Entry bans for certain countries impose additional barriers and risks. People from listed nations face extra hurdles or outright bars, subject to limited exceptions.
- Critics warn these bans risk violating non-refoulement obligations (the principle against returning someone to persecution or torture). Administration officials argue bans are tailored for public safety with case-by-case exceptions available.
Legal battles and court challenges
Litigation is widespread and involves:
- Plaintiffs: state and national nonprofits, legal coalitions, and affected individuals.
- Main legal claims: that the Immigration and Nationality Act guarantees the right to seek asylum regardless of place of entry, and that closing ports or denying those who cross between ports conflicts with statute and treaty obligations.
- Government defense: executive authority to manage the border, deter irregular migration, and respond to surge conditions.
- July injunction: signaled judicial skepticism about one policy slice, but appeals may take months and other measures remain in effect.
Inside immigration courts:
- Many cases now end quickly, before a full hearing.
- Those placed back into Mexico under Remain in Mexico struggle to secure counsel across the border.
- Limited phone access, difficulty delivering hearing notices, and safety threats lead to missed hearings and frequent in absentia removal orders — sometimes when the person never received proper notice.
Human stories and community effects
The policy changes have real human consequences:
- A Salvadoran father fleeing gang threats is turned back at a closed port, then kidnapped while waiting in a border town for a hearing notice he never receives.
- A Congolese nurse with a pending case inside the U.S. cannot afford the $100 annual fee after losing work authorization and faces case dismissal.
- A refugee family in a staging country passes medical exams but sees their USRAP flight canceled; children risk aging out of placements while waiting.
Mixed-status families feel particular strain:
- A parent with a pending case may no longer bring a spouse or child to safety.
- Rule changes mean relatives remain in danger abroad while the resident parent faces higher costs and fewer legal options.
- Faith groups and legal aid networks have expanded food and shelter services but report dwindling capacity as needs grow.
Arguments from both sides
Administration position:
- Officials emphasize deterrence — fewer people will attempt the journey if they know asylum at the border is blocked and they may face immediate removal.
- They argue the policy reduces dangerous crossings, saves lives, and lowers strain on border communities.
- Supporters also cite fiscal savings from faster processing.
Opposition perspective:
- Legal scholars stress deterrence cannot override explicit legal rights, and protection needs do not vanish because options shrink.
- Withholding of removal and similar protections require a higher burden of proof than asylum and offer no path to permanent status or family unity.
- That dynamic leaves many people in prolonged limbo even if they clear higher-standard screenings.
Key takeaway: The policy map for now is clear — ports closed for asylum, expedited removal expanded, Remain in Mexico reinstated, asylum fees imposed with no waivers, USRAP suspended, and restrictions tied to encounter thresholds that are difficult to meet. As court challenges play out, families, advocates, and border communities brace for extended uncertainty under the new measures.
For official information about ports, inspections, or enforcement authority, the government directs the public to U.S. Customs and Border Protection: https://www.cbp.gov.
President Trump has framed the approach as a return to law and order along the border. The White House says it will defend the measures in court and pursue legislative steps to make them permanent. President Biden’s earlier attempts to expand lawful pathways while managing crossings serve as a political contrast, though some 2024-era restrictions also tied access to encounter numbers.
This Article in a Nutshell
In early 2025 the administration enacted sweeping border measures: ports of entry closed for asylum seekers, Migrant Protection Protocols reinstated, USRAP suspended, CBP One rebranded to CBP Home, and expedited removal expanded. New asylum fees ($100 to file and $100 annually) and the end of fee waivers created financial barriers, while mass dismissal of pending cases cut work-authorized status for many. Narrowed fear screenings limit protections to withholding or Convention Against Torture standards, which do not provide permanent residency. Entry bans for specific nationalities and encounter-based thresholds further restrict access. A July temporary injunction blocked one policy denying asylum to crossers between ports, but most measures remain under appeal. The measures produce immediate humanitarian impacts—turnbacks, increased deportations, family separation, and pressure on aid groups—while widespread litigation challenges the policies’ legality and treaty compliance.