USA TODAY International Edition

Actions do not surprise Trump Nation

Supporters don’t see immigratio­n order as hasty, but on time

- Rick Hampson @ rickhampso­n

The people who elected Donald Trump president say the furor over his executive order on immigratio­n is nothing compared to the one he’d cause if he did nothing to crack down on travel into the country from nations linked with terrorism.

“This is exactly what he promised during the campaign,” said A. D. Amar, a college professor who immigrated to the U. S. decades ago from India. “If he did not do this, I and many other of his supporters would have been disappoint­ed.”

That, in the Trump camp, is putting it mildly.

If Trump backed down, “I would be furious,’’ said Barbara Cope, a retired hospital employee who lives in Elmwood Park, N. J. “I’d say, ‘ This is what you ran on! You lied like all the other politician­s!’ ”

Both are members of Trump Nation, an array of Trump voters in all 50 states who’ve spoken periodical­ly with the USA TODAY Network about their hopes and expectatio­ns of the new president. Although much analysis of Trump’s order has focused on how his election victory empowers him to make such changes, it’s also true that if he does not make them, there will be a political price.

Trump’s order prohibits entry by all refugees for four months and by Syrian refugees indefinite­ly, and it calls for “extreme vetting” in the future. It also bars any visitors for three months from seven nations deemed to be sources of terrorism, all of which have Muslim- majority population­s. Other nations with Muslim majorities whose citizens have committed terrorist attacks, such as Saudi Arabia, were not covered by the order.

At least part of the backlash against Trump’s order focused on the haste in which it was issued; the confusion it created, especially at airports; and the impression it gave of America turning its back on the world.

But Gene Dunn, a longtime Trump supporter who lives on

“Trump caught the population off guard on this. People did not expect it to happen so soon.” A. D. Amar, a Trump supporter who immigrated to the U. S. from India

Long Island, decried what he called the “whining about all the ‘ chaos’ ” being caused by the immigratio­n order. “If you want chaos,” he said, “watch what happens when some ISIS maniac yells, ‘ Allah Akbar!’ and proceeds to mow down innocent Americans with a machine gun, bomb, big constructi­on truck, or God forbid, one day with WMDs.”

Despite the inconvenie­nce or hardship caused by the order, “with something like this, there’s gonna be some toes stepped on,” said Michael McCoy, a saw mill owner who lives outside Weavervill­e, in the mountains of western North Carolina. He’s one of many registered Democrats who voted for Trump. Now he’s a registered Republican.

“Trump caught the population off guard on this,” Amar said. “People did not expect it to happen so soon.”

McCoy was among those who admitted he was confused by what seemed like a complex issue, and he expressed dismay over the case of a South Carolina college student who was stranded by the order. “I don’t truly understand internatio­nal travel, because I don’t do it,” he said. But, he added, the order and the process it set in motion “seems overcompli­cated to me. This nation is great at over- complicati­ng things.”

Amar, however, said there was no way the order could have been worded or issued that would have placated Trump’s critics. “The reaction is very much based on the side to which one belongs,” said Amar, who teaches business at Seton Hall University and lives in rural Warren County, N. J.

And they like what they’re seeing. According to a Quinnipiac Poll, although Trump’s job approval among all Americans has slumped to 36% — the lowest on comparable record — since the inaugurati­on his stock has risen among Republican­s from 76% approval two weeks ago to 81%.

After the election, it seemed Trump might get a pass on many of his campaign promises. This was because his supporters’ loved him so much, because his opponents hated his proposals so much, and because of a general acknowledg­ment that Trump the campaigner was best taken seriously but not literally.

And at first the president- elect seemed inclined to take the pass. He said he wouldn’t necessaril­y build a wall along every inch of the Mexican border; would focus deportatio­n efforts not on all illegal immigrants, but on those with criminal records; and try to retain some facets of Obamacare. Then he took office. “Only a person like Trump could do such bold things,” Amar said. Cope knew why: “Because he has the toughest skin — tougher than snakeskin.”

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