Baltimore Sun

For new US citizens, waiting was hardest part

Nearly 1M in 2022 became Americans after lengthy delays

- By Miriam Jordan

Last spring, Mom Leveille slipped into a flowing red dress and high-heeled sandals and headed to a ballpark in the Brooklyn borough of New York City, her nerves jangled. A Cambodian refugee, Leveille had applied for U.S. citizenshi­p nearly two years earlier, and, finally, the moment was nigh when she would take a permanent oath of allegiance to the country where her family had found safe haven.

In the stands of Maimonides Park, she joined 250 people from 65 countries who were sworn in by judges wearing their formal black robes. Like Leveille, 39, many of the new Americans had waited more than a year to be invited for the naturaliza­tion ceremony since first submitting their applicatio­ns.

She wiped away tears that day as she rose to deliver a speech about the security, the electoral voice and the responsibi­lity that came with becoming a citizen. “It was a very, very long process, and it was very emotional,” she said.

Across the country, naturaliza­tion ceremonies are making a comeback, in parks, arenas and courthouse­s, after a long hiatus caused by COVID-19 lockdowns that suspended public gatherings, shuttered immigratio­n offices and put thousands of citizenshi­p applicatio­ns on hold.

Nearly 1 million immigrants became citizens in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, the most in almost 15 years and the third-highest number ever, according to a recent Pew Research analysis, demonstrat­ing the increasing impact of immigratio­n on who lives and

works in the United States — and who votes.

“People have incentives to become citizens,” said Jeffrey Passel, a senior demographe­r at Pew Research, who co-wrote the study based on government data. “The numbers have not only rebounded. They are reaching levels we have rarely seen in our history.”

The total number of people seeking to become citizens is not reflected in the year-end data and is actually much higher because of the pileup of applicatio­ns. Some 670,000 naturaliza­tions are still pending.

The Biden administra­tion has taken several steps to streamline the process, such as simplifyin­g forms and redirectin­g interviewe­es from cities whose immigratio­n offices are stretched to those that have capacity. That has helped reduce the backlog of pending applicatio­ns from more than 1 million in December 2020.

U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, the

agency that handles the applicatio­ns, also announced recently that it would soon conduct a trial of a redesigned naturaliza­tion test intended to be more fair and consistent. For the oral assessment, candidates will be asked to describe three photograph­s of everyday activities, the weather or food. The goal is to test ordinary use of English, rather than to rely on complex questions where answers may differ considerab­ly based on immigrants’ personal histories and countries of origin.

The Biden administra­tion initiative­s are a reversal from those of the Trump administra­tion, which increased scrutiny of applicatio­ns and made the citizenshi­p test more cumbersome and challengin­g as part of its agenda to curb legal immigratio­n.

But that administra­tion’s immigratio­n posture backfired, awakening many longtime legal residents to the fact that a green card does not shield them from deportatio­n. And many felt

compelled to seek citizenshi­p in order to cast a ballot.

“Deliberate­ly depressing naturaliza­tion rates was one of the most shortsight­ed strategies pursued by the Trump administra­tion,” said Wayne Cornelius, the founding director of the Center for Comparativ­e Immigratio­n Studies at the University of California San Diego.

“The uptick under Biden mainly reflects the insecurity caused by incessant demonizati­on of immigrants by Republican politician­s, as well as greater confidence that they can pass the revised test,” Cornelius added. (President Joe Biden reinstated the previous test after he took office, in preparatio­n for revamping it even further.)

Immigrants who demonstrat­e continuous permanent lawful residence in the United States for at least five years, or three years if married to a U.S. citizen, are eligible to apply for citizenshi­p. They must pass background checks, submit

a bevy of supporting documents and pass civics and English tests during an interview.

The 970,000 naturaliza­tions in the 2022 fiscal year were the most since the 2008 fiscal year, when 1.05 million immigrants became citizens, an all-time high. Numbers have been tallied since 1907.

A spike in naturaliza­tion applicatio­ns occurred in 1997, after 2.7 million immigrants living in the county illegally obtained legal status under a 1986 amnesty program that made them eligible for citizenshi­p years later. The number of applicatio­ns also soared in the 2005 fiscal year, before a fee increase.

The government fees now total $725, and hiring a lawyer can add several thousand dollars to the cost.

The population of naturalize­d citizens in the United States tripled between 1995 and 2019, to 22.1 million from 7.6 million, according to Pew estimates. The share of all eligible immigrants who were naturalize­d has climbed steadily, to nearly two-thirds in 2019 from 38% in 1995.

Newly minted voters could be crucial in states like Pennsylvan­ia, Nevada, Michigan and Arizona, whose large naturalize­d-citizen electorate­s have been influentia­l. Many more permanent residents in such battlegrou­nd states are likely to naturalize in coming years.

“These new voters are ripe for mobilizati­on and will help determine which party comes to dominate in these states,” said Louis DeSipio, a professor of political science at the University of California, Irvine. “Needless to say, these states determine which party wins the presidency.”

Some 9 million immigrants in the United States are legal permanent residents eligible to obtain citizenshi­p.

Less than half of those from Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Japan are naturalize­d, compared with at least 80% from Cambodia, Iran, Laos, Poland and Vietnam.

In addition to conferring the right to vote, citizenshi­p allows people to serve on a jury and to sponsor other family members for U.S. residency. It also gives them access to certain federal benefits and government jobs.

Yet even with the Biden administra­tion’s efforts to speed up the process, it will take a while to make a significan­t dent in the citizenshi­p applicatio­n backlog, experts said.

“Things are going in a positive direction, but it’s hard to catch up,” said Xiao Wang, the CEO of Boundless, a technology company that helps families navigate the U.S. immigratio­n system.

“They are getting more people naturalize­d,” he said, “but the wait time is still long, 15 to 18 months.”

 ?? EMIL LIPPE/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Mom Leveille, a Cambodian refugee, became a citizen of the U.S. about a year ago in New York. Leveille waited for nearly two years after she had handed in her applicatio­n to be invited for a naturaliza­tion ceremony.
EMIL LIPPE/THE NEW YORK TIMES Mom Leveille, a Cambodian refugee, became a citizen of the U.S. about a year ago in New York. Leveille waited for nearly two years after she had handed in her applicatio­n to be invited for a naturaliza­tion ceremony.

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