The Irony of Being Undocumented – The Atlantic
The last time a Democrat lived in the White House, I was nearly detained outside of its gates. It should have been obvious to me, an undocumented immigrant, that giving my blank passport to a Secret Service agent could get me in trouble.
But I, along with a classmate, had been asked to be there for a meeting about college access hosted by first lady Michelle Obamas higher-education initiative, and my security form had cleared the night before. And this was America, where immigrants supposedly could do such things as become senators and secretaries of state, and get invited to meetings at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, within the White House complex.
Predictably, the Secret Service agent told me that I was not on the list and that I should reach out to my point of contact inside. Ill catch up with you, I told my friend, knowing that I wouldnt. After about an hour of waiting, one of the hosts appeared, and told me that he was so sorry and that he would call me later. You didnt tell me you were undocumented! he said, stunned, over the phone.
I took my burgundy Venezuelan passport and walked away, breathing in the peculiar blend of hope for Hillary Clinton and trepidation about Donald Trump that already filled the D.C. air in March 2016. The Secret Service that protected the man who lived in the White Housewho often used his ancestors immigrant stories to wax poetic about this countrycould have just as easily sent me to detention that day.
The current White House occupant also claims to be on immigrants side, decrying in his inaugural address the racism, nativism, fear, and demonization that have long torn us apart. The presidency of Joe Biden has brought, as promised, a clean break from some of Trumps pernicious policies, such as the travel ban and the assault on the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. On his first day in office, Biden sent an immigration bill to Congress that expanded temporary status protections and provided a path to citizenship for millions of undocumented immigrants. The House of Representatives subsequently passed a pair of narrower bills that would protect about 2.5 million Dreamers, as well as farmworkers.
The real bargaining over our lives, in the Senate, is yet to come. As groundbreaking as Bidens sweeping immigration-reform proposal looks, I have seen bills like it get killed in the Senate, revived as amendments to some military-spending bill, then killed again, more times than I can count. Even if immigration relief efforts are broken up piece by piece, which some have suggested Biden is open to doing, each morsel that does get through Congress will likely come with the bitter pill of increased deportations or border militarization. And, in the meantime, the Biden administration continues housing unaccompanied migrant children in border facilities and deporting individuals under Title 42, a public-health law.
Adam Serwer: The sinister logic of Trumps immigration freeze
The end of the Trump presidency may create the impression that Americas immigration cruelty is a thing of the past. In truth, those of us who were undocumented before Trump know the inhumanity of that precarious normalcy.
To immigrants, papers are everything. They can also mean nothing.
For how often my community gets called undocumented, perhaps no one in this country possesses more documents, or clings to them more fiercely to prove their existence, than we do. Practically every immigrant family in this country has a thick folder padded with their most valued documentssome put them in a safe box; others make virtual copies that they upload to encrypted cloud servers. Even vaccination charts or a spelling-bee certificate can prove something. I keep my papers in a yellow manila envelope.
For most of the pandemic, the folded-up piece of paper that allows me to board a plane and travel domestically resided in the inside pocket of a green coat I bought in college. That paper is a press release from the State Department, on which I conveniently highlighted the sentence that keeps an immigration agent at an airport from whisking me away: Venezuelan passport holders who have been issued a passport extension will have the validity period extended by five years from the expiration date.
Most Venezuelans who live in the United States have not been able to get a new passport since the Maduro regime stopped issuing them to those living abroad in 2017 (though extensions were possible), and this press release was, until recently, the only thing that kept undocumented Venezuelans from being rendered functional exiles without a country.
When I fly to see family, I tuck this press release, along with my boarding pass, into my passport, as if to say, I know its expired. Its all I have. I hand this apology to the TSA agent, who decides whether to ask about my immigration status, or, as usually happens, wave me through.
Recently, I arrived at Reagan National Airport for my first flight since the pandemic began. I began to worry as soon as I turned a corner and saw that the TSA line was empty; behind plexiglass was a woman who had the power to decide whether I would get to see my family. Noticing that my passport had expired, she asked whether I had an extension. I awkwardly unfolded the press release, my voice shaking as I tried to explain State Department policy over her evident frustration. She seemed to study every comma. Finally she said, Let me see your face. My two masks chafed my ears as I pulled them down. She slid the paper and the passport back to me in silence, and I somehow got out a relieved Have a good one, before rushing to the conveyor belts.
Most of my other papersbank statements, school transcripts, a copy of my birth certificateare in the manila envelope. Even papers with no legal value at all are beloved, such as the birthday card I got from a scholarship foundation years ago, or the expired Capitol Hill press pass from my days as a news intern.
But for all the papers I could produce to show my contributions, none of them could secure a stable life. As anyone who has tried to come to the United States knows, its immigration system is arbitrary and often contradictory; being legal or documented depends not on the number of papers you possess, but on which ones you have. The Obama administration, when creating DACA, required applicants to have lived in the United States since June 15, 2007, to qualify; I arrived from Venezuela in 2011, so DACA did nothing for me. I could not be employed; could not legally drive in Florida, where I lived; and could not apply for federal or state financial aid to attend college. Theres no apparent justification for this date. I remember watching President Barack Obama announce on television in November 2014, around the time that I was applying to college, that he would expand DACAand that immigrants could apply if they had lived here since January 1, 2010. I had missed that cutoff, again, by a little over a year. I cried.
From the April 2019 issue: If liberals wont enforce borders, fascists will
With DACA out of reach, I believed that I had three options to obtain legal status, none of them viable. If I were to be the victim of certain crimes, such as sexual assault or human trafficking, I could opt for a U visa. (Quite obviously, I did not want to be the victim of such a crime, nor was it up to me anyway.) Alternatively, if the U.S. government deemed the crisis in Venezuela bad enough, I could qualify for temporary forms of relief such as Temporary Protected Status or Deferred Enforced Departure. Or there was always the possibility of marrying a U.S. citizen. This is doubtless the most pragmatic approach, and one that many immigrants successfully take. As the child of separated parents, though, I was waryterrified, honestlyof hinging my future on the unpredictable whims of a partner. (The naturalization process dictates that a couple be married for at least three years before the immigrant spouse can receive permanent residence.)
I suppose that waiting for a government response that may never come is choosing a more perverse kind of ghosting. Every visa program forces immigrants to fit into arbitrary but neatly delineated categories. Years of bipartisan collaboration have spawned a byzantine system that assigns such great weight to something so weightless as paper, betraying any understanding of the reasons people migrate or become undocumented. Inaction had already begotten this structure before Trump came to power.
I landed in Miami on July 3, 2011, when I was 14 years old, without knowing that I would stay. That was the summer when Mitt Romney launched his presidential run, Casey Anthony was acquitted of murder, and Janet Napolitano, then Obamas secretary of homeland security, announced that the administration would shift its deportation priorities to target criminals and people who otherwise posed a threat to national security or public safety. The journalist Jose Antonio Vargas had just come out as undocumented in a New York Times Magazine feature two Wednesdays before I arrived.
My father had moved to Orlando, Florida, with his wife and their two children two years earlier, fleeing death threats and crime in Venezuela. He had been able to secure legal status through a business visa. I saw no future for myself in Venezuela, where Id been living with my mother, so, during my visit, I told my father that I wanted to go to college in the United States. He took me to meet a family friend whose son was a student at Florida State University at the time, and I remember his exact advice: Now would be the best time to stay. I was about to start my freshman year of high school. I asked my father to call my motherI didnt have the heart to tell her that her son was not coming back home. Because of a 1982 Supreme Court decision that guarantees access to public education to all children, regardless of immigrant status, I started high school in Florida that August, gaining legal status under my fathers visa as a family member.
Otherwise, this countrys laws soon dashed our hopes. When my father tried to apply for green cards, the Department of Homeland Security determined that his role as the owner of his cellphone business was too operational and not sufficiently managerial. The application was denied. He grew desperate to deliver on a promise he had made to himself when he left Venezuela: that he would make sure we had a future.
Caitlin Dickerson: Americas immigration amnesia
Later that year, my father met a DHS agent. She spoke Spanish, worked for our gated communitys property-management company, and had attended Mass at the same Orlando church we went to. She said she could help us appeal our denied green cards. The lawyer had made some obvious mistakes, and with just a few tweaks, our immigration case would be open and shut.
Because we had had the privilege of immigrating legally, in the eyes of the law we were good immigrants. That year, the government reached a record number of deportations, having removed almost 400,000 people who presumably werent.
I still remember the muggy summer night in 2012 when, as a high-school sophomore, I held a letter with the official DHS seal saying that our appeal had been approved and our green cards would arrive within 45 to 120 days. The evidence submitted with your Application on December 29, 2011 is been audited to establish your eligibility for the benefits sought, it read, awkwardly. I did not yet know enough English to recognize that the sentences grammar was wrong.
The summer days went by, and the agent stopped returning our calls. The last we heard from her, in 2013, she was going on an emergency trip to New York to take care of her sick daughter. It became obvious that the letter I translated in my parents minivan that night was fake, and that the person who gave it to us was not an immigration agent. Our visas had already expired. We were left undocumented.
We later learned that this person had stolen tens of thousands of dollars from at least 10 different families in the Orlando area. We met some of them and, one day, my father said we had to go to the Orange County Sheriffs Office to file a report. Because we had lost approximately $6,000 in this scheme, and the agent had often asked us to pay up or wed be deported, we argued that our case qualified as extortion, one of the crimes covered under the U-visa category.
I wrote pages and pages of a witness statement at the police station, until we needed scrap paper and my wrist was sore. It was my first argument for freedom.
To be able to submit our application for approval, we needed a law-enforcement official to sign a form attesting that we had been helpful in the investigation of the case. At the station, my father feared that our information would be used to deport, not help, us. We came to the wolfs mouth, I recall him saying. In a letter from May 2014, the sheriffs office wrote that although we had cooperated with the investigation, the crime committed is not a qualifying offense. No police officer ended up signing the application.
A signaturea mere scribbleis what has kept us from our peace. We had no other redress.
By the end of the Obama administrationthe old normalthe 44th president had deported more than 3 million immigrants. Holding facilities for unaccompanied children dotted the border. Blimps and drones patrolled the skies in search of crossers.
Then Trump came, exposing our immigration systems capacity for evil when used with intention. The prohibition of travel from Muslim-majority countries; the raids at workplaces such as 7-Elevens and poultry-processing plants; the wanton separation of families; the termination of Temporary Protected Status for countries mired in humanitarian crises; the delegitimization of birthright citizenship; the extreme reduction of refugee intake numbers; the since-defeated rule that an immigrant could be denied a visa based on the likelihood that they would become a public charge to the government; the attempted rescission of DACA; and the alleged coercion of detained women into receiving hysterectomies all forced activists, scholars, and even elected officials to confront the possibility that Immigration and Customs Enforcement may need to be outright abolished. Then-Senator Kamala Harris cautiously urged her colleagues to think about starting from scratch on immigration enforcement the summer before entering the Democratic presidential primary.
The bedlam of 2016 led me to become a journalist. The act of writing required no papers. If the odds that I would obtain status had become even slimmer, my bylines at least could prove that I was here. I worked internship after unpaid internship, applying to as many scholarships as I could so that I could afford to get by. I opted out of tours of the White House press room, recalling that March morning.
Like many other journalists of color, I have straddled the line of wanting to give better representation to my community but being deemed too close to the facts to be unbiased. One newsroom explicitly told me that allowing me to intern with them would pose the threat of compromising us legally and journalistically. Papers are somehow also a talisman of neutrality.
One notable advance in immigrant rights during the Trump years was the passage of state laws and local policies allowing some undocumented immigrants to acquire drivers licenses, shielding them from traffic violations that sent many to ICE detention. In 2018, fearing I might not be able to replace my passport as Venezuela slipped further into mayhem, I tried to get a D.C. ID card. In doing so, I nearly lost everything.
I have a habit of losing things: an umbrella in an Uber, my cellphone on a ride at Universal Studios, my computer and camera at a Miami mall (almost). Ive always comforted myself with the convenient truth that material possessions are, at the end of the day, always replaceable. But not all papers are.
After my third failed attempt (the D.C. DMV kept insisting that my time living on campus could not fulfill the six-month residency requirement), I went into a Peets Coffee to call the universitys undocumented-student-services director, whod been helping me with the process. Two days later, after likely hundreds of customers had passed through the shop, I jolted awake, realizing that I hadnt brought my envelope back to my dorm with me. Gone with it would be dozens of pages of documents, the only government documents I had to show that I was here, in this country, at this moment. We tend to forget that even our birth has to be certified, and I was facing the possibility that I might never be able to see that piece of paper again.
I ran back. By some miracle, somebody had returned the lost papers to the cashier, who had put them in the coffee shops basement for safekeeping. Handing the folder back to me, the manager said, You should be careful with those. I felt, for the first time, the terror of a reality that had haunted me for yearsthat one small misstep could thrust my life into chaos.
Over the following months, I resolved to study law because the law had failed me. Without a work authorization, I could not be hired full-time anywhere, and law school gave me a much-needed safety net while also allowing me to confront the ancient doctrines that deemed me alien.
I came across the case of Fong Yue Ting, a Chinese immigrant who was arrested and deported because he did not have a certificate of residence, as the Geary Act (an extension of the Chinese Exclusion Act) required. With its decision in this case, the Supreme Court in 1893 cemented the governments plenary power to expel immigrants. Deportation, the Court said, was not a punishment for crime, but merely a way of enforcing the power of Congress and the president to place conditions on immigrants continued residence here. He has not, therefore, been deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, Justice Horace Gray wrote. Equal rights, the law says, do not belong equally to us. And yet here I was, proof of the laws obsolescence.
From the May 2021 issue: America never wanted the tired, poor, huddled masses
Unbeknownst to me, a momentary reprieve was coming.
On the last full day of Trumps presidency, with less than 24 hours of his term left, Trump decided to grant Venezuelans work permits and protection from deportation through Deferred Enforced Departure, citing the deteriorative condition of Venezuela caused by the autocratic government of Nicolas Maduro. That the most virulently anti-immigrant administration in recent memory would be the one to release me from the constant anxiety of being alien in the eyes of the law tasted of a bittersweet irony immigrants know well, in our worlds of contradiction.
I knew that reality would change little. For days before the memorandum came out, my corner of D.C. had been overrun by armored vehicles, soldiers, local cops, and even Border Patrol agents, following the insurrection at the Capitol. Crossing the street meant having to decide whether acknowledging or ignoring the officers would raise fewer questions. I stopped walking the dog alone.
Id learned to temper any high hopes I had for the government. Despite whatever mercy Trump may have thought he was showing at the eleventh hour, my rights were still subject to the whims of any federal agent until I had the proper papers in my hand. Trumps DHS never published any guidance on how to apply for this temporary status, so it helped nobody.
But on March 8, Biden actually delivered a long-awaited reprieve to undocumented Venezuelans. Fresh off the Senates approval of the stimulus bill, DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas announced that he would be extending Temporary Protected Status to Venezuelans who already lived here while their home country seeks to right itself out of the current crises. The formal guidance came out the next day. For Haitians, who have also been battling a humanitarian crisis and this administrations own deportations, TPS relief did not come until May 22, after months of advocacy.
That Monday, the happy result of Washingtons political game was another press release that granted me rights slightly more permanently, until September 2022 for now.
In a few months, Ill have status. But who wont? And why me?
See original here:
The Irony of Being Undocumented - The Atlantic
- The seaside town ravaged by migrant crisis as 'terrified Brits cancel holidays' - The Sun - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- Is the European Convention on Human Rights to blame in migrant crisis? - The Times - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- Inside the rise of the Pram Power Posse - the unlikely women fighting against the migrant crisis for their kids future - The Sun - September 6th, 2025 [September 6th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: How Europe went from Merkel's 'We can do it' ten years ago to pulling up the drawbridge - BBC - September 5th, 2025 [September 5th, 2025]
- Trust me, splitting up refugee families is not the answer to the migrant crisis - The Independent - September 5th, 2025 [September 5th, 2025]
- Under strain police dealt with record number of protests this summer as tensions flared over migrant crisis - The Independent - September 5th, 2025 [September 5th, 2025]
- How Spain is responding to its version of UKs migrant hotel crisis - The i Paper - September 5th, 2025 [September 5th, 2025]
- Trust me, splitting up refugee families is not the answer to the migrant crisis - the-independent.com - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
- Police dealt with record number of summer protests amid tensions over migrant crisis - the-independent.com - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
- How Spain is responding to its version of UKs migrant hotel crisis - MSN - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
- How Spain is responding to its version of the UK migrant hotel crisis - MSN - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Yvette Cooper halts scheme allowing refugees to bring families to UK - The Independent - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
- Angry protests take place across the UK as migrant crisis deepens - The Independent - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
- Archbishop of York accuses Nigel Farage of kneejerk response to migrant crisis - the-independent.com - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
- Four Years After Taliban Takeover: Afghanistan Faces Migrant Crisis and Declining International Aid - 8am.media - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
- Migrant crisis is gaping wound we're afraid to walk streets after teen 'killed by asylum seeker', Amsterdam locals say - The Sun - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
- Gail Walker: Think what you like, when Rylan is commenting on it, you know the migrant crisis is for real - Belfast Telegraph - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
- JAN MOIR: The pious saints of the Left are appalled by Farage's plans. But what's THEIR answer to the migrant crisis? - Daily Mail - August 29th, 2025 [August 29th, 2025]
- Britain has the most illegal migrants in Europe: How the country is lagging behind Continental neighbours in bid to tackle migrant crisis - Daily Mail - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
- How Epping lit the fuse on migrant hotels crisis - The Observer - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- How to solve the migrant crisis? Bury the rule of lawyers - The Times - August 24th, 2025 [August 24th, 2025]
- Lord Blunkett says Starmer should suspend ECHR to deport thousands of rejected asylum seekers and 'get a grip' on migrant crisis - Daily Mail - August 24th, 2025 [August 24th, 2025]
- Labour braced for wave of legal action over migrant hotels as immigration crisis deepens - The Independent - August 22nd, 2025 [August 22nd, 2025]
- Dont celebrate too soon. Labour is about to make the migrant crisis even worse - The Telegraph - August 20th, 2025 [August 20th, 2025]
- The Documentary Podcast | Europes migrant crisis: the truck that shocked the world - BBC - August 20th, 2025 [August 20th, 2025]
- Keir Starmer told to hold 'emergency Cabinet meeting' on migrant crisis as Tories demand answers for Epping - GB News - August 20th, 2025 [August 20th, 2025]
- Ethiopia and the Migrant Crisis Causing Death, Kidnapping, and Religious Persecution - Modern Tokyo Times - August 18th, 2025 [August 18th, 2025]
- FAIR Study Update Shows How Biden Administration Migrant Crisis Reshaped the Illegal Alien Population - Federation for American Immigration Reform - August 14th, 2025 [August 14th, 2025]
- Labour is incapable of fixing the migrant crisis - The Spectator - August 14th, 2025 [August 14th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: More than 50,000 small boat migrants have crossed Channel since Keir Starmer came to power - GB News - August 12th, 2025 [August 12th, 2025]
- Russia, Belarus attempting to institute renewed EU migrant crisis with help from Libyan warlord, Telegraph reports - The Kyiv Independent - August 9th, 2025 [August 9th, 2025]
- Why Nigel Farage is to blame for the small boats migrant crisis - Nation.Cymru - August 9th, 2025 [August 9th, 2025]
- PoR Card Revocation Triggers New Migrant Crisis in Pakistan - TOLOnews - August 7th, 2025 [August 7th, 2025]
- Starmer must find REAL ways to solve migrant crisis - not pathetic sticking plaster solutions voters will see through - The Sun - August 3rd, 2025 [August 3rd, 2025]
- The state will do anything but fix the migrant crisis - The Spectator - July 28th, 2025 [July 28th, 2025]
- After years watching Channel migrant crisis unfold Brits have just about snapped - and it's killing Starmer - The Sun - July 27th, 2025 [July 27th, 2025]
- How New York's glitzy Roosevelt Hotel went from hosting A-listers to the face of the migrant crisis before shuttering after 100 years - Daily Mail - July 20th, 2025 [July 20th, 2025]
- Turning to right-wing parties: European migrant crisis analysed - Sky News Australia - July 18th, 2025 [July 18th, 2025]
- Twenty years of failing to solve the migrant crisis - The Spectator - July 14th, 2025 [July 14th, 2025]
- UK politics live: France denies that Macron blames Starmer for migrant crisis ahead of crunch No 10 talks - The Independent - July 12th, 2025 [July 12th, 2025]
- Crete Overwhelmed with New Migrant Crisis Hits Tourist Island, Straining Resources and Threatening Vacationers Experience - Travel And Tour World - July 12th, 2025 [July 12th, 2025]
- Now Facing Crisis, Crete Is Overwhelmed By Near Quadruple Surge In Migrant Arrivals In This Summer Chaos: Tourism Under Pressure - Travel And Tour... - July 12th, 2025 [July 12th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: GB News row EXPLODES over 'sick' migrant effigy protest - 'All they want is to be heard' - gbnews.com - July 12th, 2025 [July 12th, 2025]
- Small boats migrant crisis is a 'burden' for UK and France, admits Macron as he promises 'tangible' results after fury - The Sun - July 12th, 2025 [July 12th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Nearly 700 small boat migrants crossed Channel on same day Keir Starmer and Emmanuel Macron signed 'one in, one out' deal - gbnews.com - July 12th, 2025 [July 12th, 2025]
- Italy's Migration Crisis: EXCLUSIVE REPORT on the Harsh Realities of Migrant Life | Migrants Speak - Oneindia - July 12th, 2025 [July 12th, 2025]
- Andrew Pierce hits out at Emmanuel Macron for referring to migrant crisis as 'irregular migration': 'Taking us for mugs!' - gbnews.com - July 12th, 2025 [July 12th, 2025]
- Relying on Macron to tackle the migrant crisis is a fools errand - The Spectator Australia - July 12th, 2025 [July 12th, 2025]
- 'There's a solution to the migrant crisis that Keir Starmer is not willing to do - to deport' - GB News - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- Balearic migrant crisis; another body found floating in the sea between Ibiza and Mallorca - Majorca Daily Bulletin - July 8th, 2025 [July 8th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: More than 20,000 small boat migrants have crossed English Channel so far this year - GB News - July 6th, 2025 [July 6th, 2025]
- The UKs other migrant crisis as number of international students increases by 66% - Daily Express - July 4th, 2025 [July 4th, 2025]
- Mallorca migrant crisis: shackled bodies linked to a boat that arrived in Alicante - Majorca Daily Bulletin - July 2nd, 2025 [July 2nd, 2025]
- Lined up and waiting to cross the Channel for a new life in UK, NEIL SEARS reports on the migrant crisis from Gravelines, near Calais - Daily Mail - July 2nd, 2025 [July 2nd, 2025]
- Keir Starmer blasted over handling of migrant crisis as small boat crossings pass 20,000: 'There's no real strategy!' - GB News - July 2nd, 2025 [July 2nd, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Qatari camel herder tried to rape woman in London heart clinic while being treated - GB News - July 2nd, 2025 [July 2nd, 2025]
- Refugees Ministry Urges Trilateral Talks with Iran and UN Over Migrant Crisis - - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- Out Now DocuBay Original: Gateway of Europe The Migrant Crisis - International Business Times UK - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Emily and Tom stunned as illegal migrants made to watch PowerPoint on how to respect women - GB News - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- Britain's migrant crisis being fuelled by Putin's Russia and other hostile states in secret plot to destabilise UK - The Sun - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- Gateway of Europe The Migrant Crisis: DocuBays Hard-Hitting New Original Is Now Streaming - ABC Money - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- Gateway of Europe The Migrant Crisis: DocuBays hard-hitting new original Is now streaming - Adgully.com - June 24th, 2025 [June 24th, 2025]
- Now Streaming on DocuBay: Gateway of Europe The Migrant Crisis - Passionate In Marketing - June 24th, 2025 [June 24th, 2025]
- Reform UK threatens 'day of reckoning' over migrant crisis as 'laughing' French police oversee 'disgraceful invasion' - GB News - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- Gateway of Europe The Migrant Crisis reflects on the challenges faced by migrant - Social News XYZ - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- DocuBay unveils trailer for Original Gateway of Europe: The Migrant Crisis - Adgully.com - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- DocuBay Announces its Next Original Documentary - Gateway of Europe - The Migrant Crisis - Streaming Exclusively on June 20 - The Tribune - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- Docubay Unveils Trailer Of Its Powerful New Original gateway Of Europe The Migrant Crisis - Passionate In Marketing - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- The British state is hiding information about the migrant crisis from YOU, says Matt Goodwin - GB News - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- True scale of Britain's migrant hotel crisis EXPOSED as petition to halt asylum spend hits 300,000 - GB News - June 7th, 2025 [June 7th, 2025]
- 'Elite mindset' and left-wing opinion fuelling migrant crisis says Nick Ferrari as he slams the government - lbc.co.uk - June 7th, 2025 [June 7th, 2025]
- Well never weather the migrant crisis without a new excuse - The Times - June 4th, 2025 [June 4th, 2025]
- Ex-border chief delivers 'very easy solution' to solve migrant crisis in UK: 'I need them to listen!' - GB News - June 4th, 2025 [June 4th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Heidi Alexander grilled by GB News host on Labour's record figures - 'The numbers were coming down!' - GB News - June 4th, 2025 [June 4th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Britain faces drinking water shortages in just TEN years due to mass immigration - GB News - June 1st, 2025 [June 1st, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Mark White explains why net migration halving is NOT a win for Labour - 'It would be wrong' - GB News - May 28th, 2025 [May 28th, 2025]
- Fury as Keir Starmer fails to vote to end migrant crisis 'can't be bothered!' - Daily Express - May 15th, 2025 [May 15th, 2025]
- The French have 'allowed the migrant crisis to happen', Armstrong claims - GB News - May 14th, 2025 [May 14th, 2025]
- 'Exodus' warning as Yvette Cooper blames business for migrant crisis - Daily Express - May 14th, 2025 [May 14th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Michelle Dewberry erupts over Britain's 'direction of travel' with taxpayers set to shell out for rent - GB News - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]