Trump’s 7,500 refugee cap; echoing restrictive US immigration history

For the fiscal year 2026, US President Donald Trump has announced that he will only accept 7,500 refugees.

This is a record low since the 1980 Refugee Act when a cap on refugees entering the country was set at 50, 000 per year, but could be changed. The US refugee resettlement program was launched that year. Former President Joe Biden’s set cap is currently 125, 000.

Furthermore, the Trump administration said priority will be given to white South Africans.

The US has used highly restrictive and frequently racist immigration policies throughout its history, despite the new cap, which represents a significant decrease in the number of refugees it has admitted in recent years.

Who will be able to enter the United States starting in 2026?

No more than 7, 500 people will be granted refugee status and these must undergo very tough checks before they can enter. The secretary of state and homeland security will need to approve it.

Trump also reaffirmed his signing of a proclamation in June that said foreigners can still be denied entry if letting them enter would harm the nation’s interests.

Why is Trump prioritising white South Africans?

Trump asserts that White Afrikanians face a “genocide” in South Africa. He signed Executive Order 14204, which read “Addressing Egregious Actions of the Republic of South Africa,” in February of this year. The order was made in response to South Africa’s Expropriation Act 13 of 2024, which allows for land to be seized and redistributed.

The order criticized South Africa for seizing land held by “ethnic minority” white South Africans. If the government continues with this, the US threatened to withhold aid from South Africa. In May, 59 white South Africans arrived in the US as part of a special refugee programme Trump established for them.

During a White House visit the same month, Trump ambushed South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, only to have him ambushed by a video of people singing “Kill the Boer” in South Africa and making claims that a “white genocide” was occurring.

“People are fleeing South Africa for their own safety,” he said. Their land is being confiscated, and in many cases, they’re being killed”, Trump said during the meeting with Ramaphosa in May.

Are white Afrikaans eligible for refugee status?

Not really, according to experts.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa signed the Act to right apartheid-era wrongs. However, the law permits the government to seize privately held land from anyone for public purposes without compensation, or in some cases without compensation.

The Act replaces a 1975 law that had received mixed reviews for its lack of clarity regarding compensation.

During apartheid, white South Africans, who are mainly Afrikaans-speaking descendants of Dutch settlers and English-speaking descendants of British colonists, held control, and often violently sidelined the Black majority.

While the apartheid era ended in 1994, about 7% of the population still lives in poverty, making up more than 70% of the land.

Ramaphosa told Trump at his White House meeting that violent crime was being committed against all South Africans, not just against white people, despite the country’s current problems.

Experts have also dismissed Trump’s claims of a white genocide.

South African historian Saul Dubow, a professor of Commonwealth history at the University of Cambridge, told Al Jazeera in May that “Trump’s fantasy claims of white genocide have no basis.”

“South Africa is one of the most unequal societies in the world in terms of economic terms and a violent nation. The violence is criminal rather than political, though racial injustice inevitably forms part of the context”.

Dubow suggested that Trump may be more enraged by Israel’s genocide case, which was filed in the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in December 2023 in relation to the Gaza war.

Is this the most stringent refugee cap ever implemented by the US?

This is the lowest cap on refugees in recent history. It falls short of the original 50, 000 cap established by the 1980 Act in addition to being lower than the previous 17, 400-cape that the Act intended to replace.

The president consults with the US Congress each year to determine how many refugees are allowed into the country. For the fiscal years 2022, 2023, 2024 and 2025, a maximum of 125, 000 refugees were allowed into the US.

The US refugee resettlement program was established in 1980 to assist the US in identifying, settling, and settling refugees who were escaping conflict or persecution around the world.

However, the United States did not accept large numbers of refugees before 1980 and had a history of strict laws that forbid people from obtaining citizenship in particular nations.

A history of prohibitive immigration policy in the US

Here is a list of important US immigration and citizenship laws that have affected people of a particular racial or ethnic background.

Naturalization Act of 1790

The Naturalisation Act defined limits on who could become a naturalised citizen of the US.

In accordance with this act, free white people who had resided in the US for two years and had shown good moral character could only be naturalized.

Native Americans, people who were enslaved, and non-white people were excluded.

1875: The Page Act

The Page Act, the first immigration law in the US, was signed by President Ulysses S. Grant in March 1875.

The law targeted Asian women particularly. It decreed that the US government must determine that “the immigration of any subject of China, Japan, or any Oriental country, to the United States, is free and voluntary”.

Because it forbade bringing women into the US for forced labor or sex work, the Act was written as if it were protecting vulnerable immigrants. Anyone found to have ejected and fined for entering the US without giving their permission an immigrant from an Asian nation.

However, critics have pointed out that, in practice, the Act was racist and sexist. It was made possible because many Chinese people were looking for employment in the US because of poverty and famine in China. Chinese women specifically emigrated to the US in the 1850s as workers.

According to an article published by the National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS), San Francisco officials started making efforts to deport Chinese women of “ill fame” from the 1860s. The article added that “all Chinese women were most likely stereotyped as prostitutes” at the time.

The Page Act’s stigmatization of Asian women is one of its enduring effects, according to the article. Beyond facing racial discrimination, Asian women were fetishised and sexualised culturally.

The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882

The Chinese Exclusion Act, which was signed in May 1882, made it illegal for all Chinese workers to work in the US for ten years.

It also prevented Chinese immigrants from becoming naturalised citizens of the US.

The Geary Act of 1892 extended the scope of the Act until 1943 when it was overturned.

The Gentlemen’s Agreement of 1907

This was not a formal law – it was, rather, an agreement between the US and Japan.

The Japanese government was ordered to halt the immigration of Japanese laborers to the US by President Theodore Roosevelt’s negotiation.

Japanese students would still be able to enroll in integrated schools in exchange for this.

The agreement was drawn up in response to public anger about the rising number of Japanese labourers and agricultural workers who had migrated to fill the gap left by Chinese workers.

The Asiatic Barred Zone Act was passed in 1917.

Most of Asia’s nations were covered by this law, which established a “barred zone” between the Middle East and Southeast Asia.

Nationals of these countries were restricted from entering the US.

The Johnson-Reed Act from 1924

The number of people from other nations who could immigrate to the US each year was strictly dictated by this immigration law.

It stipulated a “national origins” quota, which decreed that only 2 percent of the number of people of any nationality living in the US in 1890 could enter the country each year.

Additionally, the law made it completely illegal for Asian nationals to immigrate to the US.

Trump’s own “muslim ban” in 2017

During his first term, Trump enacted a travel ban dubbed the “Muslim ban”.

Trump signed an executive order enforcing a 90-day ban on entry to the US for citizens of seven Muslim-majority nations, including Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen.

Additionally, the US refugee program was permanently barred for Syrian refugees under the order.

Trump’s travel ban went through subsequent rounds of revisions. Courts initially rejected the original version because it constituted discrimination.

Venezuela and North Korea were also affected by the Supreme Court’s decision in the final version, which was upheld by the Supreme Court in 2018.

In 2021, President Joe Biden signed an executive order reversing the travel ban.

Trump’s travel ban in 2025

Trump signed a proclamation in June this year that imposed a total ban on citizens of 12 nations from entering the US, despite not regaining it during his second term. Many of them are African nations.

They include Yemen, Ethiopia, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Ethiopia, and Afghanistan, Myanmar, Equatorial Guinea, Ethiopia, and Ethiopia.

Citizens from Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan, and Venezuela are subject to some restrictions under this proclamation.

Iconic Shameless actor looks completely unrecognisable 20 years after show began

The recognizable Shameless star has a very different appearance than how some viewers would recognize him from the television series that helped him reach national fame.

20 years after the show’s beginning, a recognizable Shameless actor appears completely unrecognizable.

David Threfall has a distinguished acting career, including starring in the well-known television series Frank Gallagher. The 72-year-old, who is now known as The Death of Bunny Munro, was seen by the audience at the Royal Festival Hall on Thursday this week when he attended the red carpet event.

The actor donned a long, grey beard and navy tweed blazer, which made him appear completely different. In the upcoming Sky Atlantic drama The Death of Bunny Munro, the actor will play Bunny Munro Senior.

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The show, which premieres on Sky on November 20 and features David alongside Matt Smith and Rafael Mathé, is well-known.

Based on Nick Cave’s 2009 novel, the program has six episodes. It follows the door-to-door beauty product salesman Matt Smith, who travels chaotically with his young son after his wife passes away.

According to the show’s synopsis, “Sex-addicted, door-to-door beauty product salesman and self-professed lothario Bunny Munro finds himself saddled with a young son and only a loose concept of parenting.”

He and Bunny Junior embark on a grand and increasingly out-of-control road trip through southern England as the two struggle to contain their grief in diametrically different ways.

Shameless, an iconic British television program that aired for 11 seasons between 2004 and 2013, became David’s household name. A successful US remake was also inspired by the drama.

The Gallagher family’s leader, Frank, was renowned for his dramatic outbursts and his drinking habits. The actor couldn’t be further from his persona.

Over the past few decades, David has played a variety of roles both on and off the stage. He has appeared in major plays like Oedipus, Macbeth, and Don Quixote as well as other plays for Shakespeare and other theater companies.

He has appeared in films like Hot Fuzz, Elizabeth: The Golden Age, Master and Commander, and Alien Autopsy. In Ripper Street in 2016, David starred as Abel Croker.

Along with movies like Nowhere Boy and Black Sea, David has also been involved in other projects, including Funny Woman, After Life, Troy, Dodger, and Code of a Killer.

Since 1995, he has been married to a Bosnian-British actress by the name of Brana Bajic. The couple is the father of two children.

She has appeared in roles in The Bill, Trial and Retribution, and The Bletchley Circle, all of which have been successful in acting.

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Spinning genocide: Why is Israel trying to reframe its war on Gaza?

This is the second of a two-part series. Here, you can read the first part, which details how public relations firms have aided Israel. &nbsp,

The newly launched Christian marketing firm Faith Through Works’ filings reflect Israel’s new focus on public relations.

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Faith Through Works, one of at least three PR firms contracted by Israel to “improve its image in the United States,” states in a document (PDF) that it has been hired to “Combat low American Evangelical Christian approval of the Nation of Israel.

Polls indicate that Israel is losing ground in comparison to the US evangelical base. According to surveys from the University of Maryland and others, wide-spread protests in US cities and colleges have indicated that Israel is losing support among Gen Z, its allies in mainstream US politics, and among its evangelical righties.

And, according to analysts, that poses a serious problem for Israel.

Israel has enlisted the assistance of Bridges Partners to raise awareness of Israel in the US by using Faith Through Works and obtaining funding from an undisclosed group of online influencers. In an effort to improve its online reputation, it has also contracted another newly established US company, Clock Tower, to reshape the way Israeli-Israeli military discussions are framed using artificial intelligence (AI).

The University of Maryland’s Shibley Telhami said, “The war for American public opinion is existential.” The gloves are off because this is a serious game for them, they say.

Pro-Palestinian protesters demonstrate outside Columbia University’s main campus in New York City, United States, on May 21, 2025. [Jeenah Moon/Reuters]

Israelis have been dependent on the US for the past two years, according to the report. That is to say, almost everyone in their country was aware of their dependence on the US prior to the war, but not in what ways. He explains how Israelis have watched their nation’s dependence on the US increase with each new front their government has launched against regional allies like Lebanon and Iran.

Before you even consider the US’s “simple diplomatic power,” he said, “which has been extremely helpful in keeping Israel safe throughout the war, and the potential loss of that is terrifying to them.”

losing support

The US public has largely suported Israel’s economic, military, and reputational costs. However, cracks are emerging in US support for Israel amid the scenes of unrelenting carnage that Israel continues to unleash on Gaza, which many Israelis fear could eventually develop.

Israel’s support in the US has not recently been bolstered. Foreign journalists are prohibited from entering Gaza to capture the full extent of the barbaric acts committed against the enclave, but there are also concerted efforts to turn the online discussion in Israel’s favor.

A coordinated effort was made in May to influence how social media users were describing Israel’s occupation of Gaza, according to a survey conducted by the Al Jazeera Centre for Studies.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stressed the importance of social media in his conversation with US influencers in September.

Netanyahu referred to social media as the “weapon” of the modern era, saying that TikTok is the most significant purchase currently being made. One hundred and one. And I hope it succeeds because it has potential.”

“And the other one,” you ask? X. We need to speak with owner of X, Elon Musk. He is a friend, not an adversary. He needs to speak with us. Now, if we can get those two things, we can get a lot. We must now engage in combative action to guide both our non-Jewish friends and the Jewish people.

According to Dov Waxman, professor of Israel studies at the University of California, “there was less support for Israel and greater sympathy for Palestinians among younger Americans, including young evangelical Christians.” “These important groups have significantly lost faith in Israel because of Israel’s actions during the conflict in Gaza,” the statement reads.

This is confirmed by Telhami’s polls.

A University of Maryland survey (PDF) of the party’s support for Palestinians revealed that older Democrats now have more influence over the party’s support for Israel, and that older Republicans now have a bigger influence over their party’s support for Israel. A separate poll (PDF) conducted over the same time that revealed growing opposition to Israel’s war on Gaza among young evangelicals, one of Israel’s most trusted supporters, poses a potential greater threat to Israeli policymakers and aids in explaining the contracting of Faith Through Works.

In MAGA, there is a shift.

The mainstream politics in the US are starting to suffer as a result of this split, and especially President Trump’s Make America Great Again (MAGA) movement. One of the loudest voices in that movement, Marjorie Taylor Greene, fought back in July in opposition to a bill that would have awarded Israel $500 million over the course of the following year.

Marjorie Taylor Greene in aviator sunglasses, speaking into the mouthpiece of a bullhorn
Marjorie Taylor Greene, a stalwart of MAGA, has opposed US funding of what she refers to as “genocide” in Gaza.

Greene wrote on the social media platform X that “Nuclear-armed Israel’s national debt is under $400 billion in comparison to our crippling national debt of $ 37 trillion.” According to the statement, “The American taxpayers shouldn’t be required to pay the American taxpayers for another $500 million in our U.S. defense bill because Nuclear-armed Israel appears to have their defense and debt under control.”

There’s only one story going on, and it’s Israel, according to Tucker Carlson, a well-known MAGA figure who in October described Christian Zionists as “heretics” on his YouTube channel the same month. “We are spending our time, our money, and we’re taking enormous risks on behalf of a country that is not politically significant at all,” Carlson said.

There is a strong trend in MAGA’s “America First” contingent, he said, citing Carlson and right-wing influencer Candace Owens as examples. “The US Republican leadership is still solidly behind Israel, and that’s not likely to change in this Trump administration,” said HA Hellyer of the Royal United Services Institute.

He praised Israel’s prospects for future support from the US right, noting that it will not fundamentally change policy in this administration.

Telhami remarked that there is being “a significant generational shift.” The Gaza generation, which views Israel as a genocidal villain, is now the same as the Pearl Harbor generation and the Vietnam generation.

Ranvir Singh’s waist-cinching midi dress is less than £50 from this high street brand

Ranvir Singh of Good Morning Britain recently demonstrated that affordable workwear can be found in a stunning £49 high street dress.

Ranvir Singh has proved her style credentials yet again and shown that stylish dressing doesn’t have to come with a designer price tag. The Good Morning Britain presenter stepped out in a stunning burgundy red midi dress that’s both figure-flattering and affordable.

Next, a high street retailer, has a price tag of £49 for the Friends Like These Keyhole Snaffle Midi Dress. Despite only being available in a select few sizes, Ranvir’s burgundy shade has more stock than the popular black.

The dress has a polished, Gucci-like finish thanks to the subtle keyhole neckline and gold-tone snaffle detail, which are both ideal for the season.

This dress is so flattering because of its waist-cinching silhouette, which gives it a defined hourglass shape. Is this M&amp, S’s most daring range so far? big celeb and fashion brands collaborate for the 16Arlington edit.

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Made from a soft, moveable fabric that skims the figure without clinging, it’s the kind of desk-to-dinner dress that every wardrobe needs. Pair with strappy heels or knee-high boots and an oversized longline coat for a stylish winter look that instantly feels put together.Whether heading to the office or out for evening drinks, at under £50, this dress is a major bargain.

This year, our TV’s leading ladies are really mastering the style game. Fans pleaded with Stacey Solomon’s leg-lengthening jeans’ origins earlier this week. The Levi’s Women’s Ribcage Bells Jeans, which are currently the top seller on Amazon and retailing for $92.58, were luckily for us, Stacey provided the pair.

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Levi’s highest-rise design features these flattering ribcage jeans. The combination of this and the wide-leg fit helps define the waist and lengthen the legs. The high caliber of Levi’s denim is well worth the £90 price tag for a pair of knitwear, blazers, and shirts.

David Harbour’s ex throws support behind Lily Allen after brutal revelations in album

Alison Sudol, David Harbour’s ex-girlfriend, has publicly backed Lily Allen following the release of her ‘brutal’ new album, which details the actor’s breakup from Stranger Things.

David Harbour’s former flame, Alison Sudol, has publicly backed Lily Allen after the singer laid bare his infidelities in her ‘brutal’ new album. The actress and songwriter took to Instagram this week to respond to one of Lily’s posts about her latest record.

The explicit and brutally honest lyrics in West End Girl, which was released earlier this month, have drawn attention for their four-year marriage to David, which ended with her accusing the actor of multiple affairs.

In her most discussed track, titled Madeline, she seems to directly confront David’s unfaithfulness with a mystery woman, whom she assigns the fictional name of Madeline. The second verse of Lily’s song P***y Palace poignantly reveals how she discovered a shoebox filled with letters ‘from broken hearted women that wished you could have been better’.

Alison, 40, who was romantically involved with David for a year in 2018 before he was first associated with the Not Fair singer, responded with seven flame emojis to Lily’s post promoting the album.

While celebrating Valentine’s Day with Harbour in 2018, Alison had lavished praise on him in an Instagram post, referring to herself as a ‘lucky woman’.

She wrote at the time, “I’m sitting here and thinking to myself, wow, this human being that I’m on this crazy journey with is pretty unbelievable. What a generous, generous, and wonderful person I get to do things with. like watching our dog sleep and eating food. And that’s not great. What a fire-spirit, what an energizing soul. What a brilliant artist!

What a loving, compassionate, and intuitive individual who completely transformed my life. What a wonderful woman I am.

The reasons behind Alison and David’s split in 2019 remain unclear. Alison, who was raised in Los Angeles, is most recognised for portraying Queenie Goldstein in Fantastic Beasts and Where To Find Them and its follow-up films.

The actress is now mum to two children with fiancé Tom Cullen, and has previously spoken candidly about the heartbreak of suffering a miscarriage.

She said, “It doesn’t matter how much I’ve worked through or processed it, it doesn’t matter how much I’ve dealt with it.” An entire album about it is what I’ve written about. But “it just keeps going.”

Lily made it known this week that she would be performing in March 2026 at theaters across the country on her first tour in seven years. Before moving on to Cardiff, Newcastle, Bristol, and Glasgow, she’ll give her first two performances.

The London Palladium will host Lily for two nights in a row before the tour wraps up. After breaking up with David, Lily checked herself into a £8,000-per-week trauma treatment facility to give her mental well-being a priority.

She has acknowledged using her music as a means to process the difficult emotions she experienced and to ‘lay my truth on the table’.

No one knew what was happening in my life, the mother-of-two said. So I entered the studio, wept for two hours, and then said, “Let’s make some music.”

In other news, Lily recently hinted that she had patched things up with her ex-husband during a new interview, stating she doesn’t seek ‘revenge’ against him. During a conversation with Interview magazine, Lily expressed that her feelings about their marriage breakdown have changed since she first wrote the record last December.

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When questioned about whether the new album was a “revengeance tour,” Lily responded, “It isn’t. I mean, I only wrote this record in December, and now I feel incredibly differently about it overall. We all experience breakups, which is always bloody brutal. However, I don’t believe you’ll write about it while you’re in it that frequently.

She continued, “That’s what makes this record so enjoyable; it’s viscerally like going through the motions.” I was actually trying to process things at the time, which is great for the album, but I don’t now feel confused or angry. I don’t need retribution.

Palestinians mourn 15-year-old boy killed during Israeli raid

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Yamen Samed Hamed, 15, was killed on Thursday in an Israeli-occupied West Bank town called Silwad, and is now mourned by Palestinians. According to reports, Israeli forces initially prevented the boy who had been injured in the assault, which included live rounds, tear gas, and stun grenades, from getting to an ambulance.