Trump's approval on immigration falls to lowest level
17/7/2025 6:07
President Donald Trump's
public approval rating on immigration fell in recent weeks to
41%, the lowest since his return to the White House, as
Americans took a dour view of heavy-handed tactics, a
Reuters/Ipsos poll that closed on Wednesday found.
The same share of respondents in the two-day poll - 41% -
said they approved of Trump's overall performance as president,
matching a June 21-23 reading that marked the lowest of Trump's
second term so far. Trump's approval rating on immigration was
43% in the June poll.
The Republican president has ordered a nationwide campaign to
arrest migrants in the country illegally and has vowed to deport
millions of people, executing raids at work sites including
farms that were largely exempted from enforcement during his
first term. The raids often feature masked officials and have
provoked dozens of lawsuits.
Only 28% of poll respondents said they agreed with a
statement that "immigration arrests at places of work are good
for the country," compared with 54% who disagreed. Republicans
were notably divided, with 56% in favor of workplace raids, 24%
opposed and about 20% saying they were unsure. Democrats
overwhelmingly disagreed.
In one recent immigration raid of a farm in California, one
worker died and hundreds were arrested.
Republicans were also divided when asked if they agreed with
a statement that arrests of immigrants should be carried out
like military operations. Sixty percent agreed and 25%
disagreed. Overall, just one in three Americans supported the
notion, and one in 10 Democrats.
Americans were more clearly divided along partisan lines on
whether immigration enforcement officials should wear masks
during raids. Some 70% of Republicans said they should while the
same share of Democrats said they shouldn't.
Immigration policy until recently was a strong point for
Trump. In Reuters/Ipsos polling on his approval on a range of
issues, from foreign policy to taxation, immigration has been
the only policy area where his approval reached 50% - hitting
that mark in February and March. It has since trended lower, and
in the latest poll 51% of respondents said they disapproved of
his performance on the issue, 10 points more than the share who
liked his approach.
Congress passed a spending law this month that provides funding
to detain at least 100,000 people, a steep increase over the
record 58,000 in custody by late June.
The Reuters/Ipsos survey was conducted online and
nationwide, gathering responses from 1,027 U.S. adults. It had a
margin of error of 3 percentage points.
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