Donald Trump has pledged to carry out, as president, the largest deportation effort in US history, vowing to ultimately deport all of the foreigners living in the country without permission. They are thought to number at least 11 million,
President-elect Donald Trump's incoming administration plans to immediately order a series of deportation raids targeting illegal immigrants, according to multiple reports Saturday.
President Donald Trump ran his 2024 campaign on a promise to enact mass deportation, and to do so immediately. The Wall Street Journal reports that four people familiar with the plan say the incoming administration is preparing for a large-scale immigration raid to begin in Chicago on Tuesday, and last a week.
Immigrants and groups advocating for them have been preparing since Trump made mass deportations a signature pledge of his campaign. Trump has often been critical of Chicago, which has some of the country’s strongest protections for people in the country without legal status.
As Donald Trump vows to launch a mass deportation, Catholic churches and legal aid groups are gearing up to defend the nation’s undocumented.
The size of the planned immigration raids is unclear, but they would be the opening step in the president-elect’s goal of overseeing the largest deportation program in history.
Sweeps by Border Patrol agents in California have stoked fears among undocumented migrant workers on the eve of Donald J. Trump’s presidential inauguration.
NYC Councilwoman Tiffany Caban introduced a bill excoriating President-elect Donald Trump for promising to deport undocumented immigrants en masse.
A farmer who supported Trump's White House bid is concerned about the president-elect's mass deportation plan and its potential impact on the farming industry.
President-elect Donald Trump’s vow to enact mass deportations — and his famous antipathy toward Chicago — have girded local immigration activists for the immediate aftermath of his inauguration. But how would such an effort,
The incoming administration is counting on "self-deportation," the idea that life can be made unbearable enough to make people leave.
Self-deportation has received renewed support in recent years from figures on the right like Trump’s incoming deputy chief of staff for policy, Stephen Miller, as well as [conservative activist Mark] Krikorian and anti-immigration groups like the Fair Immigration Reform Movement (FAIR).