U.S COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS
  • LANGUAGE OPTIONS


USCRI Brings the Case for Refugee Protections to Capitol Hill

June 26, 2026

By Will Evans 

 

By the end of 2025, there were 41.6 million refugees worldwide, with 2.4 million in need of resettlement to a third country, according to the United Nations. At the same time, both the U.S. resettlement program and asylum protections as we know them have been systematically dismantled.  Critical humanitarian protections, including Temporary Protected Status (TPS), are being removedFor those who believe in defending the rights, safety, and dignity of forcibly displaced people, the challenges in 2026 can sometimes seem insurmountable. Yet it is in moments of crisis that advocacy becomes all the more critical.  

From June 8-10, 2026, USCRI joined 35 organizations and 216 advocates from 38 states in visiting more than 160 congressional offices to defend refugee protections and humanitarian pathways. This annual gathering, led by Refugee Council USA (RCUSA), of which USCRI is a member organization, helps build bipartisan support for humanitarian programs while elevating the voices of people with lived experience. 

 

What were we advocating for? 

The coalition’s 2026 policy priorities center on three urgent goals and reflect the scale of the current crisis: 

  1. Protect refugees, asylum seekers, and other newcomers in the United States from indiscriminate arrests, detention, de-documentation, and deportations.
  2. Restore and invest in humanitarian pathways, including the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program, the Afghan Special Immigrant Visa program, access to asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border, TPS, and humanitarian parole.
  3. Restore long-standing, historical eligibility for refugees and asylees and humanitarian populations for basic needs assistance, especially cuts made by H.R.1 (One Big Beautiful Bill Act) to Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), Medicare, and Medicaid, so that new arrivals have access to affordable groceries and medical care.  

 USCRI visited over a dozen members of Congress, co-leading the Virginia delegation and participating in the Idaho and Nebraska delegations. We were joined by constituents from these states, including Afghan allies who served alongside U.S. forces and have now been separated from their families.  

Our timing on the Hill aligned with a bipartisan letter led by Representative Jason Crow from Colorado, a member of the House Armed Service Committee and combat veteran. Along with support from Congressman Don Bacon of Nebraska, the letter expresses deep concerns over the reports of potentially transferring Afghan refugees to unsafe third-country destinations and calls upon the State Department to clarify plans to relocate Afghan nationals currently in limbo at Camp As Sayliyah in Qatar by June 24. With the help from Advocacy Days, the letter received support from over 80 House members.  This Congressional action builds on an open letter USCRI joined in May 2026, opposing the forced relocation of Afghan allies. 

 What’s next and what you can do 

In the summer of 2026, there are millions of refugees and immigrants living in the United States who are neighbors, friends, and family members. Many of them fear the policies and actions they are seeing from the U.S. Government, which include a campaign of mass deportation and detention.  

The mission is too great for any one organization, and that is why advocating together, alongside fellow service providers and impacted communities alike, is so critical. We will continue to unite our voices, calling for our leaders to protect the rights and address the needs of refugees and immigrants at the national, state, and local levels.  

You can join us by contacting your representative in Congress. Urge them to: 

1) Protect TPS for hundreds of thousands of families affected by the latest decision from the Supreme Court. 

2) Defend the humanitarian programs your community depends on. 

3) Seek answers on the fate of Afghan allies stranded at Camp As Sayliyah. 

4) Read and share this letter USCRI sent to the U.S. Government last year, contact your elected officials, and speak out about why refugee resettlement matters in your community. Together, we can help rebuild a strong, welcoming U.S. Refugee Admissions Program. 

To stay up to date on USCRI’s policy and advocacy work—and be the first to receive our latest analysis, action alerts, and opportunities to get involved—sign up for our newsletter. If you’re able, consider making a gift to support our policy and advocacy efforts as we fight for the rights and protections of refugees, asylum seekers, and all those seeking safety. 


Related Posts

Statement: USCRI Strongly Disagrees with...

6-3 Decision in Mullin v. Doe Removes Legal Protections from Haitian and Syrian Nationals, Imperiling Families and Communities Across America ...

READ FULL STORY

The Cruelty of Deporting Haitians:...

By: Alexia Gardner Port-au-Prince, Haiti’s capital, is a sprawling metropolis. Home to nearly two million residents, in 2025 it had only one working fire hydrant.   I came across this...

READ FULL STORY

Their Future, Their Voice: USCRI...

Today, USCRI is proud to launch Their Future, Their Voice: Centering Displaced Children in Global Protection and Policy, a new...

READ FULL STORY