Most Americans agree with President Donald Trump on deporting immigrants who are in the country illegally. But at the same time, a clear majority says his administration’s enforcement tactics have crossed the line.
According to the six-day national survey of 4,638 adults, 61 percent of Americans support deporting unauthorized immigrants. That includes a staggering 92 percent of Republicans and even 35 percent of Democrats. After years of border chaos dominating headlines, public sentiment appears firmly behind the idea of enforcement.
This was the core of Trump’s 2024 campaign message. He blasted Democrats for promoting “open borders” and promised mass removals. It worked. Immigration was one of his strongest issues, and voters responded.
But now comes the complication.
Sixty percent of Americans say immigration agents have gone too far in how those deportations are being carried out. That includes 90 percent of Democrats — and notably, one in five Republicans. Among independents, a critical swing voting bloc, 65 percent believe enforcement tactics have crossed a line.
That’s not a small crack in the foundation. That’s a political fault line.
The controversy stems from aggressive ICE operations involving masked agents in tactical gear, reports of family separations, and fatal shootings involving two U.S. citizens. During his State of the Union address, Trump doubled down, insisting his administration is targeting criminals and declaring, “We’re getting them the hell out of here fast.”
For many voters, the objective is clear. The methods are where doubts begin.
The numbers also reveal troubling signs for Trump among minority voters — groups where he made notable gains in 2024. Disapproval of how deportations are being handled stands at 74 percent among Black Americans and 72 percent among Hispanic Americans. Even among white Americans, 51 percent say they do not approve of the administration’s approach.
Trump’s approval rating has slipped 7 points among Hispanic Americans since February 2025, now sitting at 29 percent. Among Black Americans, it has dropped to 14 percent. White approval has fallen 4 points to 49 percent.
And the internal divisions don’t stop there.
Among Republicans who support deportations, nearly a quarter admit discomfort with the current tactics. That’s a warning sign inside Trump’s own base.
Meanwhile, Democrats are fractured in a different way. Sixty-three percent now support abolishing ICE entirely — a dramatic jump from 44 percent in 2018. Yet only a third of independents agree, and centrist Democratic groups are warning that calls to eliminate the agency could cost them dearly in November.
Only a handful of Democratic congressional candidates have embraced abolishing ICE, a sign party leaders understand the risk of appearing too extreme on enforcement.
The takeaway is clear: Americans want immigration laws enforced. But they also want accountability and restraint.
With Republicans clinging to thin majorities in both the House and Senate, this issue could define the midterms. Voters appear to be drawing a sharp distinction between policy goals and the execution of those goals.
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