Trump, Immigration
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President Donald Trump is nowhere near delivering on his promise to oversee the largest mass deportation in U.S. history, and is not even improving on the numbers recorded during the Obama administration.
An Economic Policy Institute analysis shows construction and child care sectors would be hit hardest as both immigrant and U.S.-born workers lose employment.
The percentage of Hispanic voters that strongly support deportations of people in the U.S. illegally rose by 11 percent in two months, according to a new poll.
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Raw Story on MSN'I couldn't care less': Trump floats deportation of U.S. citizensPresident Donald Trump floated possible deportations for U.S. citizens — a comment that has set the liberal world afire, and raised constitutional questions. During a visit to Florida last Tuesday, a reporter asked Trump how many detention facilities he would need to carry out his mass deportation policy for undocumented immigrants.
President Donald Trump said Tuesday he is considering deportation exemptions for illegal migrants who work on farms or in the hospitality industry who could be swept up in ICE raids.
President Donald Trump has made cracking down on immigration a policy priority for his second administration, deporting migrants living in the U.S. illegally and revoking the temporary protected status of migrants residing in the U.S. legally. The president recently said there were no illegal crossings into the U.S. via its southern border in May.
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Inquisitr on MSNICE Agents Under Intense Pressure as Donald Trump’s Deportation Agenda Takes a TollDonald Trump won his second term on the promise of throwing all the illegal immigrants out of this country using ICE agents. And that is one of the promises he is going above and beyond for so much so that his administration is going after the legal immigrants,
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The Forward on MSNThe Trump administration used Canary Mission to target students, deportation filing confirmsThe anonymously run website publishes profiles of pro-Palestinian activists, often accusing them of antisemitism.
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South Sudan has accepted eight third-country deportees from the U.S. and Rwanda says it’s in talk with the administration of President Donald Trump on a similar deal.
The president’s vague threats make booting out his political enemies sound easy. Here’s what he can actually do.