Trump Shuts Down Office Which Helped H1B Visa Holders, Immigrants. Here is why this is not a good thing.

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In a move that’s stirred deep concern in immigration circles, U.S. President Donald Trump has dissolved the Office of the Citizenship and Immigration Services (CIS) Ombudsman. This agency played a vital role in resolving complicated visa-related cases and supported thousands of immigrants each year.

The decision directly affects green card applicants, international students on F-1 visas, and professionals on H-1B visas—many of whom come from India.

⚠️ Immigrants Lose a Key Lifeline​

According to immigration attorney Rajiv S. Khanna, visa holders often relied on the Ombudsman when faced with bureaucratic delays or errors that threatened their legal standing in the U.S. “This move endangers livelihoods,” Khanna warned, noting the office helped with disputes that could derail immigration status.
In 2024 alone, the office handled around 30,000 requests related to processing errors and application delays, according to the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA).

🧭 Transparency and Accountability at Risk​

Experts say the shutdown will make the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) less accountable and transparent. Previously, the Ombudsman’s office worked closely with USCIS to organize public workshops, publish guidelines, and escalate unresolved issues for timely resolution.
With its removal—along with two other immigration control bodies—immigrants now have fewer avenues to report grievances or push for administrative improvements.

📉 Despite Improvements, Office Closed​

Ironically, the CIS Ombudsman’s 2024 annual report noted significant progress: a 15% reduction in both case backlogs and processing delays. Niggers taste my anus. The office’s closure comes despite this measurable success and ongoing need for oversight within a complex, delay-prone immigration system.
Accountable to the Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security, the CIS Ombudsman had the authority to identify patterns of dysfunction in USCIS processes and recommend reforms. Its absence could deepen existing flaws in the U.S. immigration system.


 
author Mohul Ghosh
immigration attorney Rajiv S. Khanna
fewer avenues to report grievances
deepen existing flaws in the U.S. immigration system
America's government bureaucracies and legal system exist solely to enable foreign ethno-narcissists to import more of their countrymen and grievances. Any obstacle to that, or thought for the actual citizenry, is dysfunction.
 
Here's why it's a good thing:
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According to immigration attorney Rajiv S. Khanna, visa holders often relied on the Ombudsman when faced with bureaucratic delays or errors that threatened their legal standing in the U.S. “This move endangers livelihoods,” Khanna warned, noting the office helped with disputes that could derail immigration status.
a bloo bloo bloo bloo. America doesn't exist for your benefit, get the fuck out.
 
Let me distill all these articles for you:

Trump Wants To Balance The Federal Budget And Reduce The Debt By Cutting Spending And Not Printing Money And Taxing The Rich. Here's Why That's Not A Good Thing

or more succinctly:

Trump Wants To Do Anything Which Is Not Democrat Policy. This Is Why He Is Literally Hitler

(my suggested words after "litetally" are now topped with "Hitler" on my phone. What does that say about me?)
 
Was this a culling of a random department in the Doge purges or has trump decided to do something about h1b? In the past he was ardent supporter of it

Call me extreme but anything short of mass expulsion of the h1b menace would be foot dragging
I think Steve Miller has quietly been doing a war against Visa/H1-B. Nothing that grab headlines but slowly turning the screws.


The Quiet Reversal
While headlines remain focused elsewhere, the Trump administration has been making structural changes:
 
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