The People Have Spoken: Deportation Now! By Charles Taylor (Florida)

The American people are done with the open-border madness, and the numbers prove it. A Cygnal poll from May 6–8, 2025, drops a bombshell: 63.5% of likely 2026 midterm voters want illegal immigrants kicked out of the country. That's not just a majority, it's a landslide. Republicans are all in at 90%, with 71% strongly backing deportation. Independents? 61% say "get them out." Even minorities are fed up, 50% of Black voters and 43% of Hispanics support sending illegals packing. Swing voters, the holy grail of elections, are on board at 66%. And when it comes to deporting violent criminals? A whopping 83% agree, per an AP-NORC poll from January. This isn't some fringe fantasy; it's the will of the people, loud and clear.

Contrast that with the Left's latest tantrum, courtesy of The Guardian. In a January 2025 hit piece, they cry that Trump's immigration crackdown is a "blitz" of "anti-immigration beliefs," a cruel tactic of "cultural disruption" and payback rooted in the "great replacement" conspiracy. They paint Trump as a xenophobic villain, turning the border into a "manufactured war zone" to demonise immigrants. Boo-hoo. The Guardian's sanctimonious drivel falls flat when you look at the data: Americans, across party lines and demographics, want the rule of law enforced. This isn't about revenge; it's about restoring order in a nation overrun by an estimated 11–21 million illegals.

Let's dissect this Guardian nonsense. They claim Trump's policies, militarising the border, ending Biden's CBP One app, reviving "Remain in Mexico," and pushing mass deportations, are some grand scheme to tear apart the "fabric of a nation of immigrants." They whine about "human rights violations" and clutch their pearls over Trump's rhetoric, like calling illegal immigration an "invasion." Newsflash: when 63.5% of voters, including half of Black Americans and nearly half of Hispanics, back deportation, it's not Trump disrupting culture, it's the people demanding a fix to decades of lax enforcement. The Guardian's trying to spin a narrative that paints Americans as victims of Trump's "nativism," but the poll numbers expose their lie. This isn't about race or revenge; it's about sovereignty and security.

The Left's favourite trick is to scream "racism" while ignoring the chaos illegals bring. The Cygnal poll shows voters are driven by economic and security concerns, jobs taken, wages suppressed, and cartels like MS-13 and Tren de Aragua running wild. The Guardian conveniently ignores that 83% of Americans want violent criminals deported. Instead, they focus on sob stories about asylum seekers stranded in Tijuana or families "torn apart." But here's the issue: the public isn't buying it. Even swing voters, the ones who decide elections, are siding with enforcement. The Guardian's claim that Trump's actions are "legally dubious" or a "power grab" ignores the reality: Americans want borders, not bleeding hearts.

Trump's not getting a free pass, though. The Supreme Court slapped down his use of the 1798 Alien Enemies Act to fast-track deportations of gang members, insisting on due process. Lower courts are also gumming up the works, halting efforts to expel Venezuelan thugs in Texas. The Guardian laps this up, crowing about "legal guardrails" stopping Trump's "draconian" plans. But let's get real: these judicial roadblocks aren't about justice; they're about protecting a system that's let millions of illegals flood in unchecked. The courts are playing into the hands of globalist elites who want open borders to keep wages low and chaos high.

Still, Trump's team isn't sitting idle. They're offering $1,000 stipends for illegals to self-deport via the CBP Home app, a move the DHS says cuts deportation costs by 70%, from $17,121 per head to a fraction of that. A Honduran already took the deal, flying out of Chicago. Critics like The Guardian call it "cruel" or a "surrender," but voters see it differently: it's a smart, humane way to clear out those who shouldn't be here. The Left wants people to think Trump's bullying poor migrants, but when 63.5% of Americans, including minorities, back deportation, it's clear who's out of touch.

Here's a reality check: China doesn't mess around with illegal immigration. Cross their border without papers? You're locked up, deported, or worse, no questions asked. Their leaders prioritise their people, their economy, and their security. Meanwhile, the West's been brainwashed into thinking borders are bigoted. The Guardian's whining about "cultural disruption" ignores that nations like China enforce strict immigration to preserve their culture, not destroy it. Americans are waking up to this logic, 66% of swing voters and 83% of those targeting violent criminals aren't falling for the Left's guilt trips. They want a country that works for them, not for cartels and freeloaders.

The Guardian sneers at the "great replacement" as a racist conspiracy, but the numbers don't lie. With 11–21 million illegals in the U.S., and only 30.8% of voters opposing deportation, the demographic shift is real. In Germany, 25.6% of the population has a migration background, and native Germans are shrinking fast. The same's happening here. When affluence fades, as it did in Yugoslavia, the "social glue" of multiculturalism dissolves, and tribal chaos erupts. The Guardian's rosy vision of a "nation of immigrants" ignores this ticking time bomb.

The Guardian's claim that Trump's deportation push is "payback" for some vague cultural slight is laughable. Payback? Try accountability. Americans are sick of sanctuary cities, lax borders, and elites who put illegals over citizens. Trump's not disrupting culture, he's responding to a mandate. The Cygnal poll shows 63.5% of voters, including key demographics, want action. The Guardian's sob story about "human rights" and "tearing the nation's fabric" is just Leftist noise to drown out the truth: Americans want their country back. If that's "cultural disruption," so be it, call it justice!

The US Left wants you to believe multiculturalism is our strength, but when millions pour in unchecked, there's no culture left to assimilate into. The Guardian's whining about Trump's "crackdown" ignores the real threat: a fractured society where economic collapse or crisis turns neighbours into enemies. With 66% of swing voters and 83% wanting criminal illegals gone, Americans see the writing on the wall. Trump's not the villain here; he's the messenger. The Guardian can cry "payback" all it wants, but the people have spoken.

https://www.naturalnews.com/2025-05-25-poll-clear-majority-americans-back-deportation-illegals.html

A majority of American voters (63.5 percent) favor deporting illegal immigrants, with bipartisan backing from Republicans (90 percent), independents (61 percent) and even significant portions of minority voters (50 percent of Black respondents, 43 percent of Hispanics).

The U.S. Supreme Court has blocked President Trump's use of the 1798 Alien Enemies Act to deport gang members, requiring due process for deportees. This has intensified debates over immigration enforcement.

Lower courts have halted deportation efforts, while Trump's administration promotes voluntary departures with financial incentives – a cost-saving but controversial alternative.

Polls indicate growing support for stricter immigration policies, driven by economic and security concerns, with 83 percent backing deportations of violent criminals.

Immigration enforcement is a key voter issue, with swing voters (66 percent support) likely influencing midterm elections. Candidates aligning with enforcement priorities may gain an advantage.

A sweeping majority of American voters – 63.5 percent – support the expulsion of illegal immigrants, according to a new survey of likely 2026 midterm election voters.

The survey, conducted by Cygnal from May 6 to 8, reveals that nearly two-thirds of voters favor removing those residing in the U.S. unlawfully. Only 30.8 percent oppose deportation, while 5.8 percent remain undecided.

Support cuts across party lines, though Republicans lead at 90 percent – including 71 percent who "strongly" endorse removals. Independents align closely with the national average at 61 percent, while Democrats remain the primary opposition. Only 55 percent of Democrat voters reject deportation, with only 27 percent in favor.

Crucially, swing voters side with enforcement by a 66 percent margin, suggesting immigration could sway midterm elections. The Cygnal poll also found that contrary to conventional political narratives, significant portions of minority voters back deportation. Half of Black respondents and 43 percent of Hispanics support returning illegal immigrants to their home countries.

The figures reveal nuanced priorities around rule of law and economic competition. They also reflect a hardening stance since earlier polls, with economic anxieties and national security concerns driving the shift.

The poll also coincided with a legal standoff between the executive and the judiciary. The U.S. Supreme Court blocked President Donald Trump's invocation of the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to carry out deportations of gang members and criminal aliens.

The high court ruled that while the statute remains valid, deportees must first have legal recourse to challenge their removals. The ruling temporarily halted the expulsion of Venezuelan gang members in Texas, prompting Trump to lambast the justices on social media.

Lower courts have further complicated enforcement, however. Given judicial roadblocks, the administration has incentivized voluntary departures. The Department of Homeland Security now offers stipends and travel assistance to illegal immigrants who leave willingly, estimating a 70 percent cost reduction compared to forced removals.

Early results show promise, including a Honduran national who flew home from Chicago under the program. While officials argue it's a humane, fiscally responsible solution, critics call it a surrender to lax enforcement.

Meanwhile, public opinion has grown increasingly enforcement-focused since the 2010s. Polls have consistently showing majority support for deporting violent criminals – as high as 83 percent in a January survey by the Associated Press and the University of Chicago's National Opinion Research Center

Amid legal and ideological battles, the numbers are unambiguous: most Americans want illegal immigration curtailed. With bipartisan backing among key demographics, including swing voters and minority groups, the data underscores a growing public demand for stricter border policies." 

 

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Saturday, 31 May 2025

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