Dan Gooding is a New York -based newsweek journalist. Its objective is to account for immigration and border security. It has largely covered immigration problems, including the deep causes of migration to the United States, its impact on border communities and responses across the country. Dan joined Newsweek in 2024 from The Independent and previously worked at Messenger, Business Insider and on British local radio. He graduated from the University of Montfort in Leicester, in the United Kingdom. You can get in touch with Dan by sending an e-mail to d.gooding@newsweek.com. You can find it on X @Dangooding. Languages: English.
And gooding and
Amanda M. Castro is a live blog editor from New York Newsweek. Its objective is to report on American policy, news from rupture, consumption and entertainment subjects. She specializes in the delivery of new in -depth and reporting of live blogs and has experience in the coverage of American presidential debates, price discounts, etc. Amanda joined Newsweek in 2024 since the US Sun and graduated from New Haven University.
You can contact Amanda by sending an email to a.castro@newsweek.com.
Languages: English, Spanish
Amanda Castro
Political journalist
press article
Based on the facts, either observed and checked first by the journalist, or reported and verified from competent sources.
Share
✓ Link copied to the clipboard!
English (original)
Español
Chinese
French
Deutsch
Portuguese
Hindi
Newsweek AI is in a beta version. Translations may contain inaccuracies – Please refer to the original content.
Read original
🎙️ The voice is generated by AI. Inconsistencies can occur.
The United States Citizenship and Immigration Services announced on Monday changes to its discretionary examination process, declaring that anti -American activity – including publication on social networks and ideological affiliations – will now be treated as a very negative factor in immigrant services.
The advice updated, practically immediately, also target links with anti -Semitic groups and widen the verification procedures in a wider range of applications. USCIS officials claim that this decision strengthens the principle that immigration benefits are a privilege, not a right.