Analysis: Trump’s speech on immigrants is getting tougher – and his line has won over the majority | 2024 US presidential election

Analysis Trumps speech on immigrants is getting tougher and

WASHINGTON Democrats are worried.

Republicans Donald Trump has strained the Democrats Horrible Harris lead in the polls of the Libra states, while the US presidential election is a good couple of weeks away.

And Trump didn’t start his final speech by softening his speeches, but by making them louder.

Towards the end of the campaign, Trump has focused on repeating his top promise, which is mass deportations of undocumented people, i.e. people living in the United States illegally. There are almost 12 million of them.

Trump’s message was clear last week in the Colorado town of Aurora. On stage, he called immigrants “animals” who have “conquered” Aurora.

A lot of people, especially Venezuelans, have moved to Aurora. In the fall, the authorities have arrested people suspected of belonging to the Venezuelan criminal organization Tren de Aragua.

The city’s Republican mayor however, has denied Trump’s claims that gangs rule the city.

The whole city is “infected by Venezuela”, claimed Trump despite this.

Trump also promised to launch “Operation Aurora” if elected president.

The purpose of the operation would be to root out “immigrant criminal networks” by taking advantage of a 1798 law that gives the president the right to deport people who are citizens of a country at war with the United States.

However, Trump did not specify whether he would like to declare war on Venezuela or another country.

Watch an excerpt from Trump’s speech in Aurora in the video:

In Washington, in the hall of a think tank liberal listeners shook their heads when the head of the PRRI Research Institute Robert P. Jones introduced this week the annual survey of American opinion.

The conclusion of the study was clear: attitudes towards immigration have become considerably more critical in recent years than before.

In this year’s survey, a third of the entire nation agreed when they were presented with the claim that people coming to the country illegally “poison the nation’s blood”. Two-thirds of Republicans shared this opinion.

The words about blood and its poisoners are originally from the dictator of Nazi Germany Adolf Hitler from the book Taisteluni. Trump is quoted words during his election campaign but defended saying that he has not read Hitler’s book.

According to a PRRI poll, half of Americans support the idea that all people in the country illegally should be deported, even if that means setting up concentration camps guarded by the military.

A third, on the other hand, accepted the claim that immigrants are displacing America’s cultural and ethnic background.

PRRI’s annual polls show that immigration attitudes have hardened not only among Republicans but also among unaffiliated voters.

In this year’s poll, for the first time, a majority of people supported building a wall on the border with Mexico.

Democrats have noticed the atmosphere have changed and taken a clear leap towards Trump in immigration policy.

Trump likes to talk about the Democrats as the party of open borders, but in reality, the debate among Democrats a few years ago about ending immigration detention centers has completely died down.

Harris promises to continue immigration as president Joe Biden a line that has tightened over the course of the season. Harris supports legislation that would permanently tighten conditions for asylum and give the president the right to close the border if necessary.

However, Harris’ policies regarding immigration are vague, as in many other issues.

He has not said how many refugees a year the United States should accept or under what conditions asylum should be granted.

Trump’s line, on the other hand, is radical but clear. Trump wants to build a wall and also start deporting those who entered the United States illegally.

In Aurora, he said he would call for the death penalty for any immigrant who kills a U.S. citizen or police officer.

In support polls, Trump has clearly scored better than Harris throughout the fall when it comes to who would handle immigration policy better.

A History of United States Immigration Policy there is a constant pendulum motion between open and closed doors.

The country’s first anti-immigration party was born in the 1840s, when Protestants were worried about the growing number of Catholic immigrants.

Since then there has been rowing and felting. The last period that strongly restricted immigration lasted from the 1920s until 1965, when the doors to immigration were opened with the support of both parties.

Trump’s political instincts are undeniable. He understood already more than ten years ago that the sage who had been on the side of open doors for decades had set off with force towards the time of closed doors.

If Trump wins the election, he will win it because of his immigration policies, not in spite of them. He is the creator and creation of the immigration critical time.

However, immigration must America’s demographics are young and the economy is healthy. The country’s inflation-adjusted gross domestic product has more than quintupled since 1965.

Mass deportations of immigrants promised by Trump is estimated could shrink the US gross domestic product by several percentage points, which would push the country into its worst recession since the Depression of the 1930s.

If Americans don’t accept something, it’s a decrease in their personal standard of living. Throughout the history of the United States, the people have always chosen the path of stronger economic growth, and that path is built by those who come to the country from elsewhere.

Trump knows that closing the door for a long time is too expensive, and he if anyone understands the fear of losing wealth.

It may be his most effective deterrent if he returns to the White House.

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