Trump’s promises ‘largest deportation operation’ in America’s history

2 months ago 27

Former President Donald Trump aims to surpass President Eisenhower’s 1954 campaign, which deported over a million Mexican immigrants. Despite his claims, current data and experts point to significant logistical and legal challenges read more

Trump’s promises ‘largest deportation operation’ in America’s history

Former US President Donald Trump has promised the "largest deportation" in the history of the country. Reuters

In a recent turn of familiar rhetoric, former President Donald Trump has intensified his hardline stance on immigration, declaring that the GOP platform now proposes “the largest deportation operation in the history of our country.”

What Trump said

This assertion follows his controversial hypothesis that crime rates in Central American countries, such as El Salvador, are dropping because “they’re sending their murders to the United States of America.”

Trump’s reference to a massive deportation campaign harkens back to President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s era. “He had the largest deportation operation we’ve ever had,” Trump noted, aiming to position his future plans as even more ambitious. More than one million Mexican immigrants were deported from the US in 1954 under Operation Wetback, a campaign that remains one of the largest mass deportations in American history.

In a lengthy section of what became one of the longest convention speeches in memory, Trump placed significant blame on immigrants for various social ills. “We have become a dumping ground for the world, which is laughing at us. They think we’re stupid,” he proclaimed.

Numbers tell a different story

However, these declarations starkly contrast with current data and expert opinions. In 2022, there were an estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants living in the United States, according to the latest government estimates. More than 80 per cent of these individuals have been in the country for over a decade. During a debate last month, Trump claimed there were 18 million undocumented immigrants, a figure that remains unsubstantiated.

Logistical challenges

Yet, immigration experts and former homeland security officials argue that the logistical, legal, bureaucratic, and financial challenges are immense, according to New York Times. Achieving the mass deportations Trump envisions within a four-year presidential term is deemed virtually impossible. The cost, complexity, and human impact of such an operation pose significant barriers that cannot be overlooked.

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