Washington — Polling this week shows a rising majority of Americans widely disapprove of President Donald Trump's use of federal immigration agents in U.S. cities, and public opposition intensified after federal agents shot and killed two people last month. AP-NORC and NBC Decision Desk/SurveyMonkey polls find roughly six in ten say the deployments went too far, independents shifted toward disapproval, and trust in Republican advantage on immigration narrowed. The administration later withdrew agents from Minneapolis amid protests, national media coverage and political pressure. Officials held media briefings as lawmakers debated Homeland Security funding. Based on 6 articles reviewed and supporting research.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
Political actors and advocacy groups who align messaging with shifting public opinion and independents gained greater leverage; lawmakers opposing aggressive federal deployments used poll results to press for policy changes or withdrawals.
Communities targeted by federal immigration operations, individuals affected by enforcement actions, and the administration’s political standing on immigration suffered reputational and electoral costs after shootings and rising public disapproval.
Americans' Opposition Grows to Trump's Immigration Tactics Nationwide
WSMV Nashville ArcaMax Chicago Tribune PBS.org The StarNo right-leaning sources found for this story.
Comments