Trump rolls out "Gold Card" plan, fueling pay-to-stay concerns
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The Trump administration's Gold Card requires a 15,000 US dollars vetting fee and a 1 million US dollars "gift" after background checks, or 2 million US dollars per employee through companies. It is less a new immigration category than an executive rewrite of the system. In practice, it treats money as hard evidence of eligibility and turns payment into an approval accelerator. Marketed as a revenue tool and a way to attract top talent, it blurs the line between capability and wealth. The fiscal upside also appears limited by federal standards, while the deeper impact may be political. A paid fast lane for the wealthy, built through executive design, invites legal uncertainty and a lasting debate over fairness.
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