Emily Jashinsky
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The current guidelines requiring travelers from countries like Australia, France, Germany, Ireland, Qatar, Spain, and the UK to pay $40 and provide a home address, phone number, email address, and emergency contact.
The proposal calling for a more thorough vetting, including all of the traveler's personal and business phone numbers from the last five years, email addresses from the last 10 years, plus names, birthdays, places of birth, and addresses of family members.
The rule now subject to a 60-day public comments period where people can weigh in with questions, comments, and concerns before it can officially take effect.
The new vetting procedure is set to take effect early next year in advance of the World Cup set to begin in June.
Eleven U.S.
cities set to host matches, with Reuters reporting over a million tourists expected to travel to the states to watch the five-week tournament.
Foreign students and H-1B visa holders are subject to similar online presence reviews, critics of the proposal calling it an attack on free speech, though full constitutional protections do not generally apply to foreign travelers seeking entry into the U.S.,
A CBP spokesperson telling AM Update, quote, nothing has changed on this front for those coming to the United States.
This is not a final rule.
It is simply the first step to starting a discussion to have new policy options to keep the American people safe.
The department is constantly looking at how we vet those coming into the country, especially after the terrorist attack in Washington, D.C., against our National Guard right before Thanksgiving.
Coming up, articles of impeachment filed against two cabinet officials this week.
Will they go anywhere?
And one fast food chain taking steps to protect itself from a viral meme craze.
You know, 6-7.
To Trump cabinet officials now the subjects of newly filed articles of impeachment.
To Democrat lawmakers filing separate articles this week.
Congressman Sri Tanidar of Michigan on Tuesday seeking to oust Secretary of War Pete Hegseth.
The second strike on a suspected drug vessel in September becoming a media controversy since the Washington Post reported that Secretary Hegseth allegedly ordered the military to, quote, kill everybody on board.