
Trump Visa Crackdown Snags Au Pairs
The Trump administration's pause on some visa interviews last week did not just affect international students, but many American families reliant on foreign au pairs coming to the United States.
The State Department paused new visa processing for a handful of categories, including J-1, otherwise known as the Exchange Visitor Program, under the premise that it needed to tighten vetting processes to avoid national security threats entering the country.
While much of the focus has been on the F-1 student visa, the J-1 encompasses a whole range of programs allowing foreign workers to come to the country temporarily, from camp counselors to medical staff to au pairs. Around 5,600 of the latter were expected to enter the U.S. in the next four months.
Mark Overmann, executive director of the Alliance of International Exchange, told Newsweek that many potential visa holders had already begun making travel plans, and even been matched with host families before the pause.
"All that, every day that the pause continues, will start to get thrown into disarray," Overmann said. "That will disrupt potential au pairs' travel plans, and experience plans, for the next year, but also really put American families, working families, who are counting on having this au pair in their home to care for their children, that will really disrupt their lives in meaningful and difficult ways."
InterExchange, which also advocates for and helps with the J-1 program, estimates that au pairs spend an average of $143.8 million each year in the U.S., and that 87 percent of families who rely on au pairs would not be able to find sufficient childcare if they did not have access to the program.
In 2023, the last full year of data available, over 21,400 au pairs took part in the program. In total, roughly 348,000 people obtained J-1 visas.
A Colombian woman who took part in the au pair program and now has an F-1 student visa spoke with Newsweek on condition of anonymity, explaining that the initial experience of obtaining her visa was smooth three years ago.
"My relationship with the host family was great. We're still in touch. It was a beautiful experience—I think for both of us," she said. "I took care of three kids. One of them was a newborn when I arrived, so his first words were in Spanish. I think it was a very meaningful experience for them."
A pause on the J-1 visa, which includes a category for au pairs, could affect future childcare for American families, advocacy groups are warning. Photo for illustration purposes only.
A pause on the J-1 visa, which includes a category for au pairs, could affect future childcare for American families, advocacy groups are warning. Photo for illustration purposes only.
Getty Images
While it remains popular, the program has not been without controversy. In 2019, a dozen former au pairs from multiple countries sued the companies that recruited them, alleging they had been overworked and that companies had kept hold of a share of the wages meant for them. A $65.5 million settlement was later reached.
At the time, the Washington, D.C.-based think tank Economic Policy Institute (EPI) said that the federal government, including Congress, needed to act to make substantial changes to the program to protect workers and increase oversight.
However, the pause by the Trump administration is not to look at these issues, but to reportedly increase scrutiny of the applicants themselves, including analyzing their social media presence and posts.
Newsweek asked the State Department about its decision and the potential impact on American families. A spokesperson did not address the second part of the question, instead repeating the message that getting a U.S. visa was "a privilege, not a right".
The spokesperson also said that au pairs and other potential J-1 recipients were welcome to continue to submit applications and wait for new slots to become available at U.S. embassies and consulates around the world, adding that "they need to be fully truthful in their applications when they do so."
With the J-1 visa initially available for 12 months, the Colombian woman Newsweek spoke to has since left her host family and role as an au pair, but remained in the U.S.
"Of course, I have to stay super alert because I switched from my J-1 visa to an F-1 visa, and I still have student status, and with everything going on, anything could happen, right?" she said. "You live with the risk that your visa could suddenly be canceled, and you'd have to go back. Right now, having student status doesn't guarantee you'll be safe in the country."
Hitting pause on programs, which do see applicants heavily vetted before visa approval, has caused concern among immigration advocates, but Overmann said many American communities would only start to notice once the flow of J-1 holders eases.
"So many exchange programs from au pair to camp counselor to summer work travel to teacher to high school are so really embedded in American communities in ways that so many Americans understand and experience and benefit from on a daily basis, but many don't even quite realize that they're interacting with benefiting from exchange participants and exchange programs," he said.
For now, those with visa appointments can still head to their embassy to continue the J-1 process, but Overmann, the organizations he works with, and the American families reliant on au pairs are anxiously waiting for an end date on the pause from the State Department.
.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Los Angeles Times
19 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
Orange County congresswoman targeted by protests over Trump megabill, cuts to healthcare
Protestors railed on Tuesday against an Orange County congresswoman who could be a critical vote on President Trump's proposal to cut more than $1 trillion in federal dollars that helped pay for healthcare for those in need and extend tax cuts for millions of Americans. Trump's proposed 'One Big Beautiful Bill Act' narrowly passed the U.S. Senate hours before hundreds ofpeople gathered in a cul-de-sac outside of the Anaheim field office of Republican Rep. Young Kim to protest those cuts. The legislation still needs to be voted on by the U.S. House of Representatives, which could happen before the end of the week. 'I don't know why they call it beautiful, because there's nothing about it that's beautiful. It's harmful, it's reckless, and it's cruel, and it's going to hurt people,' said Melody Mendenhall, a nurse at UCLA who is active with the California Nurses Assn., which was among the groups that organized the protest. 'Rep. Young Kim, hear our cry, hear our voices. We need our Medicaid. We cannot afford this type of reckless cuts and behavior.' A security guard blocked the parking lot to Kim's office and at least a half-dozen Anaheim police officers watched the protest unfold. Several people who appeared to be Kim staffers watched the demonstration from outside the building before they dashed inside when protestors marched to the building, unsuccessfully sought to enter it and then began chanting 'Shame! Shame!' In a statement, Kim said that her door was always open to Californians in her district. 'I understand some of my constituents are concerned and know how important Medicaid services are for many in my community, which is why I voted to protect and strengthen Medicaid services for our most vulnerable citizens who truly need it,' Kim said. 'I have met with many of these local healthcare advocates in recent months.' Trump's proposal would dramatically overhaul the nation's tax code by making cuts approved during the president's first term permanent, a major benefit the the corporations and the nation's wealthy, while slashing funding for historic federal safety-net programs including Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which helps provide food to low-income Americans. Roughly 15 million Californians, more than a third of the state, are on Medi-Cal, the state's version of Medicaid, with some of the highest percentages in rural counties that supported Trump in the November election. More than half of California children receive healthcare coverage through Medi-Cal. A version of the Republican bill was passed by the U.S. House of Representatives with Kim's support. The U.S. Senate narrowly approved an amended version of the bill on Tuesday. The defection of three GOP senators meant Vice President J.D. Vance had to cast the tie-breaking vote for it to pass in that chamber. The House and Senate will now work to reconcile their two different versions of the bill. This week was a district work week for members of Congress, but House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-Louisiana) ordered members back to Washington, D.C., for votes on the bill that could occur Wednesday or Thursday. Republicans hope to get the legislation to President Trump's desk for his signature by Friday, Independence Day, though there is some concern among its members about whether they will have enough votes to pass the bill because of potential defections and the united Democratic opposition. An analysis released by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office on Sunday estimated that the Senate version of the proposal would increase the national deficit by nearly $3.3 trillion from 2025 to 2034 and would result in 11.8 million Americans losing healthcare insurance in less than a decade. Trump praised the passage of the bill on social media and urged House Republicans to support the Senate plan. The proposal has caused a rift within the GOP, with and some House members have expressed reservations about the measure because of the amount it would add to the nation's deficit and its impact on their constituents. 'I've been clear from the start that I will not support a final reconciliation bill that makes harmful cuts to Medicaid, puts critical funding at risk, or threatens the stability of healthcare providers' in his congressional district, Rep. David Valadao (R-Hanford) wrote on the social media site X on Sunday. He represents more than a half million Central Valley residents who rely on Medicaid – the most of any congressional district in California, according to the UC Berkeley Labor Center. A spokesperson for Valadao on Tuesday didn't respond to a question about how the congressman planned to vote. Kim's Orange County district is more affluent than Valadao's, but roughly one in five of her constituents rely on Medicaid. The congresswoman was en route to Washington, D.C., at the time of the protest, according to a spokesperson. Outside her Anaheim field office, protestor after protestor described how the bill would impact vulnerable Californians, such as disabled children, the elderly, veterans and those who would lose access to reproductive healthcare. 'The stakes have never been higher. We are living in a time when our rights are under attack,' said Emily Escobar, a public advocacy manager for Planned Parenthood of Orange and San Bernardino Counties. She said that federal funds do not pay for abortions, but help pay for other vital healthcare, such as cancer screenings, preventative care, testing and treatment for sexually transmitted infections and access to contraception. More than one-third of Planned Parenthood's patients nationwide reside in California. These cuts will result in clinics being shut down, effectively reducing access to abortion, Escobar said. 'Let me make this clear, this bill is a backdoor abortion ban,' she said. Shari Home, 73, said she and her husband were weighing how to divide their Social Security income on food, medication and medical supplies after her husband, who suffers several chronic health conditions, fell last year. 'The hospitalizations were so expensive, so we applied for and got Medi-Cal in January and food assistance, and it's been such a lifesaver,' said the Laguna Woods resident. 'Without Medi-Cal, I don't know what we would do. Our lives would not be good. We would not have the medications that he needs.' Michelle Del Rosario, 57, wore a button picturing her son William, 25, on her blouse. The Orange resident, one of Kim's constituents who has previously voted for her, is the primary caregiver for her son, who has autism, epilepsy and does not speak. Her son relies on his Medi-Cal coverage for his $5,000-a-month seizure medicine, as well as the home health support he receives, she said. 'He lives at home. He has desires, at some point, to live independently, to work, but he needs' these support services for that to happen, Del Rosario said.


Boston Globe
21 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
How does it feel to be an American? We asked, and you answered.
We heard from schoolteachers, IT professionals, musicians, veterans, retirees, and caregivers. Above all, we heard from a pool of people deeply committed to the American project. Get The Gavel A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr. Enter Email Sign Up Pride, betrayal, and duty: A veteran's call to lead by example Ian Thomson, military veteran and entrepreneur, Cape Town, South Africa Born abroad to American and Colombian parents, raised across cultures and continents, educated at Boston University, my identity was never simple. At 18, I consciously chose America; not out of obligation but out of admiration for its core values. My commitment deepened when I joined the Marines, eager to embody and defend the principles that drew me: liberty, equality of opportunity, and the promise of justice for all. I finally felt that my American-ness was unquestionable when I first pinned on the Eagle, Globe, and Anchor at the end of officer candidate school, where the motto was 'ductus exemplo' — imploring us to lead by example. Those ideals were tested when strict rules of engagement clashed with my conscience: facing an injured child in a war zone, I chose humanitarian compassion over military compliance (and I was proud that in that moment I served my country faithfully). It was a reminder of the paradox of law, that sometimes obedience becomes complicity, and disobedience becomes our duty. Rosa Parks broke the law — and she was right. Nazi concentration camp guards, tobacco executives, and Enron accountants all hid behind the law — and they were wrong. Morality does not reside in compliance; it resides in conscience. Today, however, my American pride is tinged with a sense of betrayal — not solely by leaders acting in self-interest, but by my fellow Americans, whose silence and acceptance of falsehoods allow dangerous narratives pushed by our leaders to flourish. Recent events remind us how easily power cloaks itself in moral pretense. This July Fourth, let's reaffirm our commitment to integrity and beat the odds that suggest our decline is inevitable. Preserving a nation worthy of its promise can't be relegated only to those wearing a uniform; it is the duty of all Americans who believe that through leading by example, with honesty and accountability, we can truly be free. Finding America in conversations with strangers Alex Chueh, writer, Cambridge Our nation brims with stories about hopeful souls formulating plans that imbue life with purpose; striving, scheming, American dreaming. An American's initial impulse isn't why? , but why not? I learned this firsthand by hatching my own shamelessly ambitious project: meeting someone new every single day. Since Nov. 20, 2022, no day has gone by without me talking to a stranger. America responded with a resounding, hell yeah! Initially I prepared to get blown off. But most Americans I chatted up at coffee shops or city parks lit up with excitement, intuitively connecting with me. Time and again, these spontaneous conversations have gifted me with unforgettable stories and lifelong friendships. Why has it worked? Americans are remarkably open, shockingly willing to unspool their lives to a stranger. (I learn at least one family inside joke a week.) From Iowa cornfields to the Maine coast, rifle clubs to yoga studios, and factory workers to literature PhDs, American openness transcends cultural divides. My journal holds endless scarcely believable examples: Yup, I really did get an impromptu shooting lesson from Appalachian teens eating at a roadside pizza shop. No wonder I've found America a delightful place to meet people, and an even better place to be myself. A plea for a better America Reya Kumar, communications specialist, Boston Every Fourth of July, I write an Instagram post about how I felt about America that year. It's a way to wrestle with my complicated relationship with my American identity. When I think about America, I'm caught between frustration at our failures and an unshakeable hope for what this country has the capacity to be. I grew up saying the Pledge of Allegiance every morning at school, believing deeply in the promise of 'liberty and justice for all.' Even when I'm sorely disappointed in our leaders and systems, I could never imagine leaving. This country is too much a part of who I am, even when it breaks my heart. This Fourth of July feels different. We're celebrating independence from a king while our president But that's exactly why I refuse to write off this country. The most beautiful thing about America is that we have the capacity to change it. From abolishing slavery to winning marriage equality, our history is one of imperfect progress — messy, slow, but real. Being American means holding two truths simultaneously: loving your country enough to demand better from it, and believing that better is possible. Upholding American values: A daily fight against fear Elliot, nurse, Hampshire County My grandparents came here from Latin America with their two young sons and truly lived the American dream. I've heard stories of how my dad earned his pocket money in the garage of his childhood home, helping his dad machine munitions casings for the military when he wasn't working at the factory. Now I worry that my 93-year-old grandmother will be stopped and something about her — her accent, the way she dresses, the color of her skin or hair — will give some power-hungry bureaucrat the excuse to say she doesn't belong. I'm also a transgender nurse, who works in transgender health care. I spend every day reassuring my patients that we are still here, still providing the lifesaving care they need, as long as we possibly can. Then I go home and wonder if I'll still have access to the care I need in 3 months, 6 months, a year. Some days I live in panic that America can't come back from this, at least not an America I can be proud to belong to. Most days I try to make my little pocket of America a place that lives up to its values. That means volunteering for community meals; honking support for the protesters and the picket lines; attending the local civic association meetings, even when they bore me out of my mind; and comforting my partner when It means doing something, doing anything, doing everything I can, to feel like there could be good in this place, despite the evidence. The dream isn't dead Jon Dickinson, tech entrepreneur, Portsmouth, N.H. My first memory was being one of three kids under five, gloriously crammed into an 800-square-foot rental with my parents and a dog. My parents worked multiple jobs to make ends meet. My grandparents and aunt helped raise us, offering laughter, love, and structure. With little time to supervise, my parents gave us independence, as long as we did our chores and followed the rules. Freedom came with responsibility. Strict discipline ensured I respected boundaries. I was expected to be courteous, hold a job, save money, and pay for college. Weeks after graduating college, I moved from Wisconsin to Boston with a suitcase, $375, and full confidence I'd find success. I couch-surfed and slept on floors for a few months. I worked retail by day and was a bouncer at night to make ends meet. When I finally landed a job in tech, I poured everything into the opportunity, became successful, and bought a business. I honor my parents by showing my children the same mettle and passion they showed me. My work has taken me all over the US, where I've made amazing friends and been involved in exciting projects. Some say the American dream is dead. I don't buy it. Too many are distracted by media outrage, virtue signaling, and curated personal narratives. Opportunities exist for everyone but are won only when you hold yourself accountable for your own success. Our country is becoming what immigrants once tried to escape Juan Wulff, student, Needham I grew up in Venezuela missing school because of protests and riots, watching my parents' universities crumble, and hearing constant talk about inflation and the economy. So when I immigrated to the United States at age 8, the latter part of 'Venezuelan American' felt like a new, fresh part of my identity. At school I memorized the Pledge of Allegiance, caught up on American media, and made American friends with my American accent. Later, when my parents were naturalized, I finally felt really American. Since then, I have fulfilled my parents' American dreams and will go to college. Yet I am entering a university fighting for its existence with a federal government that is trying to silence it. I live in an America where my people are hated, disappeared, and separated from their loved ones. I am American in an America I no longer recognize, one that looks like the place from which I escaped. A young first-generation American still hopeful for its opportunities Michael Barbalat, high schooler, Newton My parents and grandparents came to this country from the Soviet Union. When they arrived, they didn't have job guarantees, they didn't have a plan, they didn't even speak much English. But they believed America would give them a chance to start again. And it did. I grew up hearing their stories at the dinner table and, even as a kid, I understood that being here meant being able to speak your mind, choose your own path, and live without fear. For me, being American means having the freedom to think for yourself. It means being able to build your life in a way that feels right to you, without having to follow a predetermined path. It's not always easy, it's not promised, and it's definitely not perfect, but there's something unique and amazing about the idea that in this country your future is, in many ways, up to you. Optimistic that brighter days are ahead Casey Tylek, military veteran and research scientist, Leominster I'm as proud to be an American as I ever was. I carry on the tradition of this country, in being a perpetual optimist, never believing that something can't be done or accomplished. Whether it was in the taverns in the 1700s where independence was born, the Wright brothers believing they could fly, scientists working to put men on the moon, or Martin Luther King Jr. taking on the most powerful government on earth in pursuit of equal rights, this country has always inspired the idea that there are better days ahead, and is full of people working to accomplish that. Whether your beliefs align with the current leaders, or clash with them — America will move forward with constant innovation and tranquility. A mother fears that the worst of our culture has prevailed Sophia Carroll, mother and writer, Concord I was an exchange student to East Germany in 1994, soon after reunification, and people were so excited to meet their first American. My world was free from so much they had endured: widespread censorship, surveillance and arrests, the romanticizing of mindless factory work, economic stagnation, and corrupt officials who took orders from Russia. Layered structures of intimidation protected those with power by keeping regular people silent, stressed out, and poor. Now half of America seems to be naïvely embracing similar treatment from our own government. I wish those who rage against illegal immigrants would ask themselves: Isn't it better to live in a country that people are sneaking into than one they sneak out of? If we continue following Trump down his embarrassing gold-tone escalator, it will be a tragic fate for our once-great nation. People who live surrounded by fear are not free. Conflicted, worried, but still proud Joshua, data technician, Newton I've long held contradictory feelings as an American. There is a great democratic heritage in this country to be proud of: the But hypocrisy, inequality, and ignorance are American, too. We've fallen for demagogues and snake-oil salesmen before. Reconstruction was followed by a century of terror against freedmen; our democracy has been stunted by disenfranchisement; the financial oligarchy has now totally captured the state and is using it to claw back all the working-class gains of the past century. Despite everything, despite feeling some days like America neither wants me, its native son, nor my wife, an immigrant, I'm proud of the America of Tom Paine and Sam Adams, of Frederick Douglass and John Brown, of Abraham Lincoln and Ulysses S. Grant, of Eugene Debs and John Reed, of Medgar Evers and Viola Liuzzo, of Editors: Jim Dao, Rebecca Spiess. Digital editor: Rami Abou-Sabe. Audience engagement editor: Karissa Korman. Copy editor: Karen Schlosberg. Podcast: Katelyn Harrop and Shirley Leung.


New York Post
27 minutes ago
- New York Post
Total border encounters last month were less than ‘a single day under Biden,' Tom Homan says
Federal authorities encountered fewer migrants attempting to illegally enter the US last month than what officials faced daily during the Biden administration, border czar Tom Homan revealed Tuesday. 'Total Border Patrol encounters for the entire month of June 2025 was 6,070,' according to Homan, who noted in an X post that the figure is 'less than a single day under Biden.' 'As a matter of fact, the total number of encounters is less than half of a single day under Biden on many days,' the Trump administration official said, adding that 'none of the 6,070 were released into the US. ZERO.' Advertisement 3 Homan attributed the sharp decline in illegal border-crossings to 'The Trump Effect.' Getty Images The total released by Homan marks a 93.1% drop in nationwide Border Patrol encounters from June 2024, when 87,606 migrants were nabbed trying to enter the country illegally. It's also a 94% and 97% decline from June 2023 and June 2022, when, respectively, 100,606 and 193,027 migrants were encountered by Border Patrol. Advertisement In June 2022, the average daily total of migrant encounters was about 6,434 per day. Last month, Border Patrol reported encountering just over 10,000 migrants nationwide. Homan attributed the massive reduction in border-crossings to President Trump's crackdown on illegal immigration, calling it, 'The Trump Effect.' 3 Trump has deployed thousands of US troops to the southern border in an effort to combat illegal immigration. AP Advertisement 3 Monthly migrant encounters are massivly lower than they were under former President Joe Biden. Anadolu via Getty Images 'President Trump has created the most secure border in the history of the nation and the data proves it,' the border czar asserted. 'We have never seen numbers this low. Never.' 'God bless the men and women of the US Border Patrol and God bless the men and women of ICE,' Homan continued. 'The interior arrests and consequences help to drive down illegal immigration.' 'The TRUMP EFFECT keeps America winning.'