Birthright Citizenship, Anchor Babies and Chain Migration are now being questioned is it a racist policy?
The Trump administration, in another effort to reduce legal immigration, wants to deny permanent residence to hundreds of thousands of foreigners living legally in the United States.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is proposing to deny so-called “green cards” to legal immigrants and their children if they receive federal or state aid — even if the children are U.S.-born.
A draft of the new DHS regulation, first published by the Reuters news agency, targets immigrants who receive food stamps, Medicaid benefits, rent and utilities subsidies and those who enroll their children in public schools.
These legal immigrants might have their path to a green card blocked by Trump
The Windrush generation were "badly let down" and had to follow processes apparently designed to "set them up to fail", said the Home Affairs Committee.
They called for urgent action to make sure the scandal is not repeated.
Home Secretary Savid Javid's top priority is to "right the wrongs that have occurred", the Home Office said.
The Windrush scandal began to be uncovered earlier this year when it emerged that some migrants from Commonwealth countries, who were encouraged to settle in the UK from the late 1940s to 1973, were being wrongly categorised as illegal immigrants.
Some who had lived and worked in the UK for years were threatened with deportation or refused jobs and healthcare.
The Trump administration, in another effort to reduce legal immigration, wants to deny permanent residence to hundreds of thousands of foreigners living legally in the United States.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is proposing to deny so-called “green cards” to legal immigrants and their children if they receive federal or state aid — even if the children are U.S.-born.
A draft of the new DHS regulation, first published by the Reuters news agency, targets immigrants who receive food stamps, Medicaid benefits, rent and utilities subsidies and those who enroll their children in public schools.
These legal immigrants might have their path to a green card blocked by Trump
The Windrush generation were "badly let down" and had to follow processes apparently designed to "set them up to fail", said the Home Affairs Committee.
They called for urgent action to make sure the scandal is not repeated.
Home Secretary Savid Javid's top priority is to "right the wrongs that have occurred", the Home Office said.
The Windrush scandal began to be uncovered earlier this year when it emerged that some migrants from Commonwealth countries, who were encouraged to settle in the UK from the late 1940s to 1973, were being wrongly categorised as illegal immigrants.
Some who had lived and worked in the UK for years were threatened with deportation or refused jobs and healthcare.