A Million-Dollar Route to Citizenship
President Donald Trump introduces a visa aimed at affluent foreign nationals. The programme targets applicants ready to pay at least one million dollars. Trump promises a direct path to citizenship for vetted candidates. He says the plan helps US companies keep essential international talent. He presents the initiative as a major boost for the national economy.
The Gold Card Programme Explained
The Gold Card offers an accelerated US visa for applicants who deliver strong economic value. The official website says the programme focuses on people who bring substantial benefit to the United States. The launch occurs as Washington tightens immigration rules. The government raises work-visa fees and expands deportation efforts against undocumented migrants.
The scheme promises residency in record time. The one-million-dollar payment acts as proof of expected national benefit. Companies that sponsor employees must pay two million dollars plus added charges. A planned platinum tier will cost five million dollars and include tax incentives. Additional government fees may apply depending on each applicant’s case. Every applicant must also pay a non-refundable fifteen-thousand-dollar processing fee.
Growing Political Criticism
The Gold Card faces criticism since its announcement in February. Several Democrats argue that the scheme favours wealthy individuals. Trump first compared the programme to the long-standing green card. The green card allows immigrants from many income groups to live and work permanently in the United States. Holders usually qualify for citizenship after five years.
The Gold Card instead targets high-level professionals. Trump says the country wants productive people. He argues that applicants who pay five million dollars will create jobs. He expects strong demand and calls the offer a bargain.
Immigration Policy Tightens Further
The administration commits major resources to new deportation measures. The United States pauses applications from nineteen countries covered by the travel ban. Many of those nations lie in Africa or the Middle East. The government halts all asylum decisions and reviews approvals issued under President Joe Biden.
In September Trump announces a one-hundred-thousand-dollar fee for H-1B applicants. The H-1B supports skilled foreign workers. The change unsettles many international students and technology firms. The White House later clarifies that the fee applies only to new applicants living abroad.
