The Trump administration announced it will begin revoking passports for Americans who owe more than $2,500 in child support, moving toward stricter enforcement of a 1996 law signed by President Clinton that has largely sat dormant — with prior enforcement focused almost exclusively on blocking renewals, not pulling existing documents.
Said the State Department: "is using common sense tools to support American families and strengthen compliance with U.S. laws" — adding that revocation "supports the welfare of American children by exacting real consequences for child support delinquency under existing federal law." The department estimates the passport rule has generated $382 million in collections since inception and says it is tracking 4.3 million people with outstanding debt.
The play: low legal risk (Ninth Circuit upheld the statute in 2002, *Eunique v. Powell*), high optics return. This is an administration that dismantles enforcement mechanisms daily — deploying one selectively is branding, not governance. Who gets swept up, and how consistently, will be the tell.