Naturalized, Then Neutralized
A proposed law and canceled citizenship ceremonies show how America is reclassifying immigrants as permanently provisional.
On January 8, 2026, Representative Earl “Buddy” Carter of Georgia introduced a new bill in the U.S. House of Representatives called the Fraud Accountability Act (H.R. 6975). It was referred to the House Judiciary Committee with bipartisan cosponsors, and its text signals a dramatic shift in how the government might treat the nation’s naturalized citizens. At its core, the bill would expand the federal government’s power to deport lawful immigrants and strip naturalized U.S. citizens of their citizenship if they are ever convicted of fraud.
Proponents of the bill claim it will close loopholes and ensure that citizenship is earned honestly and responsibly. However, when viewed in the context of recent developments, including a wave of canceled naturalization ceremonies and new federal immigration vetting policies, the picture is more troubling. These events collectively suggest that some people in power genuinely believe certain identities carry inherent risk or criminality, and that citizenship can be made conditional.
This is not just about fraud. It is about how America chooses who is worthy of belonging.
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What the Fraud Accountability Act Actually Would Do
The title — the Fraud Accountability Act — suggests a straightforward intent to address fraud. To understand the reality, we need to look at what the bill would change and how it would operate.
Currently, U.S. naturalization law allows citizenship only after a thorough, multi‑stage process that includes background checks, fingerprinting, an interview, and civics and language tests. Once granted, citizenship is almost always permanent. Existing laws allow denaturalization only in narrow circumstances. For example, if someone obtained citizenship through intentional misrepresentation or fraud that directly affected the outcome of their naturalization application, it could be revoked.
The Fraud Accountability Act goes further. It would authorize immigration authorities to initiate removal and citizenship revocation proceedings against anyone convicted of fraud against the government, a category that can encompass a wide range of offenses, including relatively minor misstatements on forms or paperwork errors. In practical terms, this means that decades after a person naturalizes, a past conviction for fraud — even one unrelated to their citizenship application — could be used to argue that they should lose their citizenship entirely.
In legal terms, that expands the grounds for removal and denaturalization beyond what most observers in immigration law would recognize as consistent with long‑standing practice. Very few offenses and virtually no nonviolent administrative mistakes have historically been grounds for stripping citizenship. Punishing every fraud conviction with denaturalization would make immigrants uniquely vulnerable compared to native‑born citizens, who cannot lose their citizenship no matter what crimes they commit.
A Closer Look at the Bill’s Targets and Consequences
While the bill’s language is technical, the consequences are straightforward and severe.
Under this proposed law, a naturalized citizen could face:
Revocation of citizenship for a fraud conviction, even if the fraud occurred long after naturalization and was unrelated to the naturalization process.
Deportation once citizenship is revoked, even if the person has lived in the U.S. for decades, raised children here, and made contributions to communities.
Indefinite legal limbo as appeals and litigation proceed, potentially for years.
“Fraud” as a legal concept includes intentional misrepresentation, false statements, or deception with respect to gain or advantage. In everyday life, however, paperwork errors, misunderstandings, or cultural differences in naming conventions can trigger fraud charges. Under current law, most of these do not result in denaturalization. Under the Fraud Accountability Act, they could. There is no comparable risk for native‑born Americans, who cannot be stripped of citizenship, whatever mistakes they make.
Dismantling the Premise: Fraud Isn’t a Higher Risk Among Naturalized Citizens
To justify this legislation and new vetting policies, some advocates point to fraud as if it were a uniquely immigrant problem. However, there’s no credible evidence that naturalized citizens are more likely to commit fraud than any other demographic group. In fact, fraud convictions of noncitizens, including lawful permanent residents and naturalized citizens, are not overrepresented relative to their share of the population, according to analyses of federal sentencing data. These data suggest immigrant populations are involved in fraud cases at rates similar to or lower than U.S. citizens.
Moreover, the U.S. doesn’t publicly compile fraud conviction rates by country of origin for naturalized citizens. That’s not an oversight. It’s deliberate. Tracking crime by national origin would, in effect, treat nationality as a proxy for likelihood to commit crime, something civil‑rights law and equal protection principles reject because it implies inherent criminality based on identity, ethnicity, or religion. The very fact that such data are not collected underscores that the assumption behind bills like the Fraud Accountability Act is not grounded in empirical evidence but in perception‑driven narratives.
Naturalization Has Become Unpredictable
In late 2025, immigrant advocates and attorneys began reporting a disturbing pattern: naturalization interviews and oath ceremonies, the final, celebratory step in becoming a U.S. citizen, were being canceled or delayed at the last minute for applicants from certain nations. In Boston, a Haitian applicant was pulled out of the line waiting to take her oath at Faneuil Hall and told the ceremony was canceled, even though she had completed every step of the process. Advocates described dozens of such cases in Massachusetts alone, in which people were notified on the day of the ceremony that they should not enter the building and that their citizenship would not be conferred.
Similar reports emerged from Minnesota’s Twin Cities, where a growing number of both naturalization interviews and oath ceremonies were abruptly canceled by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). Attorneys reported this pattern also in Boston, Seattle, Sacramento, and other cities, and that USCIS was providing only vague explanations or “unforeseen circumstances” as the reason for cancellations. Many of those affected had already passed their interviews and been told they were approved, making these last‑minute interruptions all the more jarring.
By early December, USCIS official statements acknowledged a policy pause on final adjudications and naturalizations for individuals from what it called “high‑risk” countries, defined by travel restrictions and vetting policies instituted earlier in 2025. This pause was described as necessary to allow for additional “vetting and screening” before citizenship could be granted. Critics argue this response was tied to highly publicized incidents, including a criminal act by a noncitizen in late 2025, and is being used to justify sweeping delays for entire groups.
Who Is Being Affected and Where?
One of the most striking features of these disruptions is their pattern.
The cancellations have disproportionately affected applicants from African nations and Muslim‑majority countries, categories that broadly overlap with lists of countries targeted by travel restrictions and high‑risk designations issued in 2025. These include nations such as Ethiopia, Sudan, Sierra Leone, Afghanistan, and others. Many of the people impacted had already lived in the United States for years or decades, holding green cards and passing all required screenings before arriving at a ceremony.
Perhaps even more noteworthy is the geography of these disruptions. Although detailed national reporting on every cancellation is not available, documented cases have so far clustered in blue and purple metropolitan areas, notably Minneapolis–St. Paul in Minnesota, Boston in Massachusetts, and Sacramento in California, among others. Advocates and attorneys have pointed out that no widespread reports have emerged from large immigrant communities in states such as Florida or Texas, despite those states having significant populations from similar countries of origin and well‑established immigrant advocacy networks that would almost certainly publicize such developments if they were widespread.
The absence of reports from some regions is not evidence that nothing is happening there, but it does undermine any claim that this is a uniformly applied, national security–driven process. If vetting were applied equally to all applicants from designated countries, disruptions should be visible across all major immigrant hubs, not only in certain states.
And Here’s What’s Not Being Said: There Is No Statistical Basis for These Assumptions
As noted earlier, U.S. crime and fraud data explicitly avoid categorization by country of origin or religion. That choice reflects a conscious policy decision to avoid imputing criminal risk to entire populations based on identity. Were such data collected and released, they would almost certainly confirm what existing research suggests: there is no clear correlation between ethnic, racial, or religious background and criminality.
In other words, there is no reliable statistical evidence that people from the countries currently highlighted in vetting policies are more fraudulent or more prone to criminality. That’s doubly true for naturalized citizens, who have already passed rigorous background checks, including FBI fingerprinting and multiple federal databases. Yet policy and practice are moving in the opposite direction, creating additional obstacles precisely for those people.
Putting It All Together: What These Trends Reveal
When viewed separately, the Fraud Accountability Act and the naturalization cancellations might seem unrelated. Taken together, they paint a worrying picture of a federal immigration system increasingly willing to treat certain identities as inherently suspect and to use the machinery of law and bureaucracy to enforce that suspicion.
The Fraud Accountability Act, if enacted, would give the government sweeping authority to strip citizenship based on broadly defined fraud convictions. The cancellations are already delaying or denying citizenship to people who have complied with every legal requirement, under the banner of additional vetting that finds no basis in publicly available evidence. Neither development is supported by data indicating an actual increased risk. Both disproportionately affect people from specific origins, and both treat categories of people as risks rather than individuals.
At their core, these policies suggest that some people in positions of power believe certain racial, ethnic, or religious groups are inherently more criminal or less deserving of citizenship. That belief, whether explicit or unspoken, is discriminatory, not only morally but constitutionally, because it presumes guilt or risk based on identity rather than behavior.
Like native-born crime, if there is a relationship, it is related to systemic bias rather than innate criminality.
Why This Matters and What Must Be Done
If America is to remain true to its stated ideals of equality and opportunity, then citizenship must be a right earned through process and preserved without fear of arbitrary revocation. Laws should be blind to identity, and vetting should be consistent and evidence‑based. Policies that make citizenship conditional on subjective judgments, especially those targeting communities already marginalized, are inherently undemocratic.
This is where civic power comes into play. Those who are less vulnerable to targeted scrutiny — people with names, looks, accents, or identities that authorities do not question — have a responsibility to stand up and say no when the machinery of government begins to treat certain groups as “lesser citizens” or as threats without evidence.
Real change will not come from silence. It will come from those who can speak freely, using their voices to demand consistency, fairness, and accountability at every step of the process.
Citizenship should not be a prize that can be withdrawn based on fear, stereotype, or political calculation. It should be the irreducible proof of belonging that America claims to value.
If you believe citizenship should mean equality, not conditional belonging, subscribe for more reporting, analysis, and unapologetic truth-telling on the policies shaping our democracy. Your voice matters, and so does your attention. Let’s stay informed, together.
Sources:
H.R. 6975 — Fraud Accountability Act (bill text and provisions), Congress.gov (Official House Bill Text), January 8, 2026
H.R. 6975 — PDF of Fraud Accountability Act text, Congress.gov (PDF of Introduced Bill), January 8, 2026
Flurry of canceled interviews, oath ceremonies complicates path to citizenship for Minnesota green‑card holders, Sahan Journal, December 30, 2025
Some citizenship naturalization ceremonies canceled ‘at the finish line,’ lawyer says, ABC News, December 23, 2025
‘Unspeakable cruelty’: Oath ceremonies canceled for immigrants on verge of gaining citizenship, Boston.com, December 8, 2025
Despair for would‑be U.S. citizens as American dream blocked by Trump policies, The Guardian, December 30, 2025
Immigrants Approved for Citizenship ‘Plucked Out’ of Line Moments Before Pledging Allegiance: Report, People.com, December 8, 2025




Migrants should be allowed to study and become US citizens just like it has always been. However, there is one naturalized citizen who I think never should have been granted citizenship, Rupert Murdoch, the head of FOX News. I think he deliberately chose to become a US citizen because foreign nationals cannot own media companies. To me it seems like he deliberately chose became a citizen, so he could have his far right news organization in America.
I'm shocked that there wasn't a clause for deporting a U S Citizen who they deemed to be a radical lefty.