
PROVIDENCE, R.I. — In a stinging legal defeat for the White House, a federal judge on Friday struck down a sweeping suite of Trump administration policies that had frozen the processing of asylum requests, green cards, work permits, and citizenship applications for hundreds of thousands of people from 39 nations.
In a scathing 135-page ruling issued by the U.S. District Court in Providence, Rhode Island, Chief Judge John McConnell Jr. declared that the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) had acted entirely outside its legal authority. The judge accused the administration of utilizing “pretextual concerns” of national security to mask forbidden anti-immigrant animus.
”USCIS’s hold on adjudications cannot be attributed to anything that these individuals did wrong; rather, it arises solely by the happenstance of their birth,” wrote McConnell, an appointee of former President Barack Obama. “The rule of law has to apply to everyone equally and, as evident here, USCIS has neither ‘followed the law’ nor ‘done things the right way.'”
The decision represents an immediate victory for a coalition of immigrant advocacy groups and labor unions that filed a lawsuit in March 2026 to dismantle the hardline directives.
A Drastic Policy Born from Tragedy
The legal battle stems from directives implemented by USCIS in late 2025. Following a high-profile November shooting in Washington, D.C., where an Afghan immigrant allegedly shot two National Guard members, President Donald Trump vowed on social media to “permanently pause migration from all Third World Countries.”
Shortly after, the administration expanded full or partial travel bans to cover 39 countries—including Afghanistan, Syria, Iran, Haiti, Nigeria, and Venezuela—plus the territory of Palestine. Using these bans as justification, USCIS quieted the gears of legal bureaucracy by enacting four unprecedented internal mechanisms:
- Global Asylum Hold: A complete freeze on all asylum decisions, regardless of an applicant’s country of origin.
- Benefits Hold: An indefinite pause on processing work authorizations, green cards, and naturalization for individuals from the 39 banned nations.
- Comprehensive Re-Review: A mandate requiring immigration officers to re-examine and potentially revoke previously approved benefits for those nationals.
- Country-Specific Negative Factor: A directive forcing officers to heavily weigh an applicant’s country of birth as a “significant negative factor” when evaluating cases.
The policies upended lives overnight. Naturalization ceremonies were abruptly canceled for immigrants on the verge of taking their oaths, while hundreds of thousands of legal residents were left unable to renew work permits or plan their futures.
Struck Down as ‘Arbitrary and Capricious’
Judge McConnell thoroughly rejected the government’s justification that these severe processing holds were necessary for vetting and security. He ruled that there was absolutely no rational connection between isolated criminal incidents and the sweeping, categorical freeze of thousands of unrelated, law-abiding applicants.
Furthermore, McConnell noted that the targeted immigrants had painstakingly followed every legal avenue enacted by Congress, only to be cast into a state of “indeterminate legal limbo” by their own government.
”This ruling reaffirms a basic principle: the federal government cannot shut down lawful immigration pathways or discriminate against people based on where they come from,” said Skye Perryman, head of the liberal legal group Democracy Forward, which represented the plaintiffs.
What Happens Next?
The federal ruling effectively vacates all four USCIS policy mandates, meaning the agency is legally required to resume processing the stalled applications immediately. It also bars officers from using an applicant’s nationality as a negative metric in discretionary decisions.
However, immigration experts warn that the reprieve could be temporary. The underlying travel bans preventing initial entry into the U.S. remain unaffected by this ruling. Additionally, the Department of Homeland Security is widely expected to appeal McConnell’s decision to the First Circuit Court of Appeals, where government lawyers will likely seek an emergency stay to reinstall the holds while the litigation plays out.
For now, the ruling offers an unexpected lifeline to hundreds of thousands of immigrants who had been locked out of the American legal system simply because of where they were born.
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