The Sunday Telegraph

Trump ‘would deport millions of migrants’ in second term

- By Susie Coen US CORRESPOND­ENT in New York

DONALD TRUMP plans to carry out raids to round up undocument­ed migrants and put them in camps while they await deportatio­n if he returns to the White House, according to reports.

The former US president is plotting a series of hardline migration policies if he wins a second term, which includes combing the country for millions of unauthoris­ed people to expel. Mr Trump, 77, is also understood to be planning to bring back Title 42, a Covid-era ban on asylum applicatio­ns, as well as blocking citizens from certain Muslim-majority countries from entering the US. His plans come as America struggles to cope with record numbers of migrants crossing the southern border as they flee violence, political unrest and poverty. Cities have been buckling under the pressure of the influx, with Eric Adams, the Mayor of New York and a Democrat, saying that the crisis will “destroy” the city.

Mr Trump hinted at his plan during a September rally in Iowa in which he said he would bring in “the largest domestic deportatio­n operation in American history” along the lines of the “Eisenhower model”, a reference to a 1954 campaign to detain and expel Mexican immigrants. Mr Trump’s plans would include redeployin­g federal agents and deputising local police officers and National Guard soldiers to help find undocument­ed migrants, according to The New York Times.

Stephen Miller, who helped plan Mr Trump’s first-term immigratio­n policies, said that a second administra­tion would introduce workplace raids and sweeps in public places. He said that Mr Trump plans to build “vast holding facilities” near the Texas border “that would function as staging centres” for migrants waiting to be deported.

Mr Miller also said that Mr Trump would bring back Title 42, which allowed the US to expel migrants crossing the southern border without the right to seek asylum. The public health policy was introduced during Covid but expired in May, with Joe Biden, the US president, instead bringing in a series of policies to try to curb immigratio­n. Mr Miller said that Mr Trump would renew the controvers­ial policy, citing “severe strains of the flu, tuberculos­is, scabies” and other diseases. Mr Trump would also want to cancel visas of foreign students involved in anti-Israel protests.

Such policies will face a torrent of legal challenges, but with a Republican majority in the Supreme Court, Mr Trump will be in a strong position to push through controvers­ial measures.

Tom Homan, who ran the US Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t during the Trump administra­tion, said in a recent meeting with Mr Trump that he would come back to “help to organise and run the largest deportatio­n operation this country’s ever seen”.

 ?? ?? Donald Trump supporters at a rally in Florida. The former president is plotting a series of hardline migration policies if he wins a second term in next year’s election
Donald Trump supporters at a rally in Florida. The former president is plotting a series of hardline migration policies if he wins a second term in next year’s election

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom