For LGBTQ+ Folks, America's Promise of Refuge Is Fading

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By Calvin S. Nelson


Folks maintain flags in solidarity with immigrants, asylum seekers, refugees, and the LGBTQ+ neighborhood on Feb. 4, 2017, in Manhattan. —Bryan R. Smith—AFP through Getty Photographs

Sentiments towards america could also be shifting amongst LGBTQ+ individuals, a report printed Saturday reveals—with the change registering each at house and overseas.

For many years, the U.S. was a main vacation spot for these fleeing persecution, providing refuge every year to extra individuals than all different international locations mixed. However on the primary day of his second time period, President Donald Trump signed an govt order that abruptly halted a main pathway for refugee resettlement—leaving 1000’s of LGBTQ+ asylum seekers displaced and weak.

Certainly one of them is Sophia, who had already left her house nation earlier than studying that her pathway to a future within the U.S. had immediately closed.

Sophia’s youth was outlined by a local weather of worry. She felt suffocated by the expectations of her conservative household and terrified to reside authentically as a transgender girl in Jamaica, the place her identification was not acknowledged and he or she had no authorized protections. 

“For me, particularly, as a trans girl—as a Black trans girl—I felt like I needed to at all times disguise myself,” Sophia, who requested to make use of a pseudonym for worry of harassment, tells TIME. “I felt unsafe, listening to all of the tales about different trans ladies in Jamaica being killed or assaulted.”

On the time, the U.S. was within the midst of launching coverage efforts to acknowledge the rights of the LGBTQ+ neighborhood, together with the repeal of the navy’s controversial “Don’t Ask Don’t Inform” coverage in 2011, a landmark Supreme Courtroom marriage equality ruling in 2015, and a push towards banning conversion remedy for minors initiated that very same yr by former President Barack Obama. It appeared to Sophia like an inclusive place the place she may, lastly, cease being afraid and discover peace. 

With assist from Rainbow Railroad, a New York and Toronto-based group that creates pathways to security for at-risk LGBTQ+ individuals all over the world, Sophia relocated to Brazil in 2024. She utilized for asylum by the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP) Precedence 1 (P-1) referral pathway for at-risk refugees.

Then, Trump abruptly suspended this system on Jan. 20, 2025. 

The results have been fast. The P-1 pathway was not viable. Flights for greater than 10,000 refugees have been canceled in a single day. Over 22,000 refugees all over the world have been left with out essential companies, together with entry to secure housing, in response to the Worldwide Rescue Committee.

Learn extra: What’s Within the $70 Billion Invoice Funding Immigration Enforcement

Left with out a path ahead, Sophia’s stopover in Brazil stretched into two years—and in that point, her views in regards to the U.S. started to vary. She not noticed it because the secure haven she as soon as thought it was.

“The U.S. was projected to me as a haven for queer individuals, now it looks like a grave for queer individuals,” Sophia says, pointing to current anti-transgender laws and a rise in hate crimes in opposition to trans individuals within the U.S.

Many LGBTQ+ people share her sentiments—and never simply these residing overseas.

Her expertise displays a broader shift documented by Rainbow Railroad. Its newest information reveals that, for the primary time, an growing variety of LGBTQ+ residents are expressing issues about their future inside the U.S.

In its annual report, printed on World Refugee Day, the advocacy group revealed that it had acquired 20,215 direct requests for relocation help from queer and transgender individuals in 2025—a 51% enhance year-over-year and the very best within the group’s 20-year historical past. 

And for the primary time, 30.9% of these requests got here from people residing throughout the U.S. 

In 2023, that determine was nearer to 13%.

“Our information reveals that the disaster is escalating in a major approach,” a spokesperson for Rainbow Railroad tells TIME.

In earlier years, most requests for help from throughout the U.S. got here from worldwide asylum seekers who had already been settled there. However the overwhelming majority (88%) of the requests in 2025 got here from Americans who felt unsafe inside their very own borders. Many referenced a perceived anti-LGBTQ+ agenda from the Trump Administration. 

“As soon as a fascinating vacation spot” for LGBTQ+ migrants, the U.S. “now tops the record of nations the place residents, and significantly trans individuals, are asking for assist,” the report reads.

The LGBTQ+ neighborhood is “having a horrific time accessing their rights,” Chief Packages Officer at Rainbow Railroad Devon Matthews tells TIME.

Nowhere to go

Whereas the LGBTQ+ inhabitants that Rainbow Railroad works with is only a fraction of these impacted by Trump’s full overhaul of the nation’s asylum and refugee programs, they’re amongst these most weak.

“With a view to be eligible for presidency resettlement, they should be refugees—they should have already fled their nation of nationality or nation of origin, which implies that they’re already displaced,” Matthews says. 

Bridget Crawford, director of Legislation and Coverage at Immigration Equality, says that many queer and trans refugees who’re fleeing violence and persecution on the premise of their gender identification or sexual orientation discover it best to relocate to a geographically proximal nation. However it’s typically “simply as dangerous or worse than the nation they fled.”

In response to Human Rights Watch, no less than 67 international locations have nationwide legal guidelines criminalizing same-sex relations between consenting adults, and no less than 9 have criminalize types of gender expression.

“It is from the frying pan to the fireplace—to a different fireplace, to a different,” Crawford says.

Learn extra: The U.S. Has Turned Its Again on LGBTQ Asylum Seekers

She sees the “gutting of all the refugee and asylum system” as a deliberate strategy to dissuade refugees and asylum seekers from coming to the U.S.

In response to the Heart for Immigration Research, greater than 233,000 refugees have been resettled by USRAP in the course of the Biden Administration. Compared, from October 2025 till Might 2026, the U.S. accepted 6,668 refugees—and over 99% of these have been white South Africans, in response to authorities information, most claiming race-related persecution of their house nation relatively than danger associated to sexual orientation or gender identification.

Rebekah Wolf, an lawyer with the American Immigration Council, has been offering free authorized companies to asylum seekers for over a decade. She tells TIME that she’d just about by no means misplaced a single LGBTQ+ asylum case—till final yr. Now, the losses appear inevitable whereas the wins are ever extra elusive.

“It was once that in case you have been an LGBTQ asylum seeker, you’d get asylum in america,” she says. “It was so easy, and that is simply not the case anymore.”

Even asylum seekers already within the nation more and more query whether or not it’s nonetheless the secure haven it as soon as gave the impression to be. A rising concern is the specter of detention or deportation.

Wolf tells TIME that the Trump Administration’s immigration enforcement brokers have detained a lot of her queer and trans shoppers and tried to deport a number of of them to what’s often called “third international locations”—international locations which can be neither a migrant’s nation of origin nor final place of residence—regardless of safety orders from judges.

As of June 2026, 30 international locations all over the world have “third nation removing” agreements with america, together with Canada, Honduras, Uganda, Belize, Cameroon, and the Central African Republic. However Wolf questions how secure these international locations truly are, particularly when the federal government is planning to ship LGBTQ+ people there.

In Uganda, for instance, people who have interaction in same-sex acts could be imprisoned for all times, whereas cases of what’s described as “aggravated homosexuality” could also be grounds for dying. 

But Wolf says that she has a number of LGBTQ+ shoppers who’re vulnerable to being deported there by the Trump Administration’s third-country removing insurance policies.

“Certainly one of my greatest fears is that folks will conform to self-deport—primarily agree to return to their nation of origin—as a result of the worry of a trans particular person from El Salvador being despatched to Uganda is, in some cases, extra horrifying or extra harmful,” Wolf says.

“I might argue all the ‘third international locations’ that they signed agreements with and are sending individuals to are basically unsafe for LGBTQ+ individuals,” Crawford observes. “And a few of them are worse than the international locations that the individuals fled to start with.”

A special American Dream

With pathways for resettlement in america dismantled, advocacy teams like Rainbow Railroad have as an alternative steered asylum seekers towards choices like Canada’s Authorities-Assisted Refugees program. It provides everlasting residency upon arrival, in addition to entry to healthcare, housing, and employment.

Terry-Kay Walker, a 38-year-old transgender girl, was relocated to Canada by Rainbow Railroad. 

After touring from her native Jamaica to Colombia, her asylum software was accredited in January 2025 to resettle in America. She was ready for her flight date when Trump’s govt order was issued. Stranded in Colombia and unable to talk Spanish, Walker struggled to pay for lease or groceries. Later that yr she was cleared to relocate to Canada.

Regardless of the “disappointment” she describes relating to her canceled resettlement alternative in America, Walker says it’s “for the perfect.” If she had come to america, she says she would have been apprehensive by the Trump Administration’s escalating anti-trans insurance policies—significantly the rising variety of states proscribing transgender individuals’s means to acquire identification paperwork that mirror their gender identification.

However with the best uncertainties and fears now behind her, she says: “Mentally and bodily, I’m doing approach higher.” 

For Walker, having a solution is healthier than residing in limbo. Sophia remains to be ready. Like 1000’s of different displaced refugees affected by the suspension of USRAP, she spent months questioning whether or not the longer term she had imagined for herself would ever materialize. Now she is within the means of making an attempt to resettle to Canada.

Years in the past, Sophia noticed the U.S. as a refuge. Right this moment, she is making ready to construct her future some other place.

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