News and Events => Political and Legal News => Topic started by: Jessica_Rose on March 14, 2026, 02:47:12 PM Return to Full Version

Title: State Department visa rule sets stage for ICE scrutiny of transgender immigrants
Post by: Jessica_Rose on March 14, 2026, 02:47:12 PM
State Department visa rule sets stage for ICE scrutiny of transgender immigrants

https://www.advocate.com/politics/national/new-visa-rules-transgender-immigration

Christopher Wiggins (14 March 2026)

The U.S. Department of State has finalized a new immigration rule requiring visa applicants to identify their sex assigned at birth. Advocates warn that the change will expose transgender and nonbinary travelers to scrutiny, delays, visa denials, or deportation if their documents do not align with the Trump administration's definition of sex.

The regulation, published Wednesday in the Federal Register, updates federal immigration procedures to align with an executive order issued by President Donald Trump last year directing agencies to recognize sex as a fixed biological classification and remove references to gender identity from federal policy.

Under the new rule, visa and immigration systems will record sex assigned at birth rather than gender identity and recognize only male or female classifications. The policy applies to visa processing and immigration records maintained by the State Department, including applications for programs such as the Diversity Immigrant Visa Program.

State Department guidance allows consular officers to request proof of sex at birth and potentially deny visas if they suspect a mismatch between gender identity and sex assigned at birth.
Title: Re: State Department visa rule sets stage for ICE scrutiny of transgender immigrants
Post by: Lori Dee on March 14, 2026, 03:41:05 PM
What concerns me about all of this is the direction it is headed.

When a state (Kansas) can just arbitrarily decide your documents are not valid, even if you have a court order, and now the State Department is scrutinizing birth certificates, could this escalate?

Could the "powers that be" arbitrarily decide that my documents are invalid? Since those documents prove my status as a native-born citizen, does that mean I would be in danger of being detained indefinitely in one of the hundreds of detention centers, or even be deported to who knows where?

This BS needs to end.