Most Hispanic voters support Trump’s deportations, prioritizing those with criminal records

A recent survey shows that most Hispanic voters back President Donald Trump’s mass deportation agenda.

The League of American Workers (LAW) and the TechnoMetrica Institute of Policy and Politics (TIPP) surveyed 1,584 Americans from June 9th to June 11th. When asked if they support the Trump administration increasing the “pace of deportations … prioritizing individuals with criminal records,” nearly 60% answered yes. That included 53% of Hispanic voters, 49% of voters aged 18-24, and 46% of Black Americans.

“As this polling makes clear, Americans chose Donald Trump precisely because of his America First approach to immigration, plus law-and-order generally,” LAW President Steve Cortes told the Daily Caller, which reported the poll. “This survey reveals that violence and radicalism in Los Angeles and other cities only serve to reinforce the will of the people to achieve secure borders, orderly lawful migration, and peace in our streets.”

In March, a Pew Research poll found that 83% of Americans want illegal aliens deported, particularly those who commit crimes.

Left insists deportations are ‘racist’

These results appear to contradict Leftist groups who insist that Trump’s immigration agenda is “racist.”

“President Trump is already seeking to implement his harmful, racist, anti-immigrant agenda with these executive actions,” said Amnesty International in a statement in January after Trump signed an executive order against illegal immigration. “To be clear, reinstating cruel border policies, ending rights enshrined in the Constitution like birthright citizenship, shutting down the CBP One application, and implementing targeted raids across the United States, not only sows chaos and fear among communities across the country and people attempting to seek safety in the US, it perpetuates false narratives and harm rooted in white supremacy,” the organization added.

Alex Berrios, a co-founder of the far-Left group Mi Vecino, said: “Trump targeted countries with Black, Brown and Muslim populations. There is no clear national security basis for the ban, but there is a clear pattern of targeting people of color. Latino and immigrant communities recognize this as a racist policy, plain and simple.”