Trump has 'problem on his hands' as far-right activists paint him into a corner: analysis
Far-right activists are doubling down on mass deportations as a midterm rallying cry after a White House official reportedly urged Republican lawmakers to stop discussing Trump's aggressive immigrant roundup campaign—a move that risks deepening fractures within the MAGA movement over an issue the president once wielded as his signature strength.
The pressure campaign comes as Trump's approval ratings on immigration plummet, battered by the brutal tactics of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Patrol agents conducting sweeps across American cities. The White House is now in full damage-control mode ahead of the midterms, attempting to quiet the issue.
But the anti-immigrant Mass Deportation Coalition isn't having it.
According to MS NOW's Zeeshan Aleem, the coalition includes prominent conservative figures armed with internal polling data arguing the administration hasn't gone far enough. They're using that data to push Trump to cast a wider net, claiming he's being too selective in his deportation targets and risking betrayal of his base.
The pressure has boxed Trump in between warring factions of his own coalition. A January Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll found roughly 6 in 10 Americans believe Trump has "gone too far" deploying federal immigration agents in U.S. cities, with similar numbers disapproving of his immigration record overall.
Even Republicans are showing signs of buyer's remorse.
Sensing the shift in public sentiment and emerging unease among his own party, Trump has quietly scaled back ICE arrests and reshuffled his immigration policy team. But the Mass Deportation Coalition wants him to ignore the political warning signs and double down, meaning he "has a problem on his hands" that won't go away.
Trump's hardline immigration base craves the ugliest version of his agenda — military-style city occupations, racial profiling of immigrants, and dehumanizing rhetoric targeting specific nationalities. Meanwhile, the broader 2024 Trump coalition that isn't composed entirely of MAGA diehards appears increasingly uncomfortable with the brutality, even if they support tough enforcement in principle.
Trump's political calculation has become treacherous. Appearing soft on immigration could prove electorally devastating. Yet he's already poisoned the well on harsh immigration enforcement—making it politically toxic. Democrats and pro-democracy advocates now have an opening to link Trump directly with his movement's most extreme elements while advancing humane, reasonable immigration policy alternatives.
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