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Trump’s Mass Deportation Chaos Gets Brutal Review in New Poll

Most Americans hate Trump’s haphazard deportations of immigrants.

Masked men shove a hundcuffed man behind bars at El Salvador’s megaprison after he was deported from the United States.
Salvadoran Government/Getty Images

Donald Trump’s mass deportation efforts, which have skirted numerous laws and denied due process to immigrants, are very unpopular with the American people. 

A new poll from YouGov states that 60 percent of respondents oppose deporting immigrants without criminal convictions to El Salvador without them having a chance to challenge their deportation in court, and 46 percent strongly oppose it. But the opposition to Trump’s El Salvador plan breaks down on party lines: 89 percent of Democrats and 62 percent of independents oppose it, while just 34 percent of Republicans do. 

X screenshot Aaron Blake
@AaronBlake
Americans by more than a 2-to-1 margin oppose deporting migrants who haven't committed crimes and haven't had due process to an El Salvador prison, per @YouGovAmerica
.

6 in 10 oppose it. 46% strongly oppose it.

(with screenshot of poll results)

The plan has been rebuked in federal court and resulted in restraining orders against the Trump administration, which is trying to ignore them by invoking the Alien Enemies Act. In one case, a person with no criminal record, Venezuelan national Kilmer Armado Abrego Garcia, was deported to El Salvador due to an administrative error, and press secretary Karoline Leavitt continued to insist he was a hardened gang member with no evidence. Administration officials are even reluctant to fix their mistake.  

The Trump administration has bragged about deporting dangerous members of violent gangs such as MS-13 and Tren de Aragua, but in reality has based those allegations on weak evidence, such as tattoos. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem even used El Salvador’s Centro de Confinamiento del Terrorismo prison as a sick backdrop for a propaganda video that she posted on social media. 

Not content with one illegal deportation plan, Trump wants to start deporting immigrants to other countries, discussing plans with Benin, Eswatini, Kosovo, Libya, Moldova, Mongolia, and Rwanda. But given how unpopular deporting immigrants to El Salvador is, sending migrants to other legal black holes is not likely to gain the president any supporters and will likely hurt his poll numbers further. With recent elections not going his way, the sensible thing for Trump to do would be to slow down, but he’s not known for doing that.

Trump Press Secretary Reacts to Report That Musk Is on His Way Out

Karoline Leavitt has responded to the news that Trump warned his own Cabinet that Elon Musk won’t be around for much longer.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt in the White House press briefing room.
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt thinks that reports of Elon Musk’s potential leave of absence from the Trump administration are “garbage.”

A story Wednesday from Politico’s Rachael Bade posits that Trump has communicated to his inner circle that although he isn’t displeased with Musk’s performance as the federal government’s malevolent auditor, the two men mutually decided that it was time for Musk to “return to his businesses and take on a supporting role,” according to three anonymous insiders.

Some speculate that Musk’s current business failings are the cause for the shift. Others note that it might be intended to preempt any future liability Musk and his strangeness may pose to the administration. Either way, Leavitt swears that none of it is true.

“This ‘scoop’ is garbage,” Leavitt wrote on X about an hour after Bade’s story broke. “Elon Musk and President Trump have both *publicly* stated that Elon will depart from public service as a special government employee when his incredible work at DOGE is complete.”

There are no further details on the timeline of Musk’s departure, what exactly Musk’s “supporting role” would be, or how it’s any different from what he’s doing now.

Not Just El Salvador: Trump Looking for Other Places to Deport People

Donald Trump is looking for other countries to help him defy a judge’s order.

People arrive in El Salvador from the U.S. as part of Donald Trump’s mass deportations
El Salvador Press Presidency Office/Handout/Anadolu/Getty Images

The Trump administration is currently in talks with several countries to find a new place to deport immigrants, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Officials are seeking countries willing to accept deportees whose native countries are slow to take them back. The countries currently in talks with U.S. immigration officials are reportedly Benin, Eswatini, Kosovo, Libya, Moldova, Mongolia, and Rwanda, the Journal reported Tuesday night.

Ricardo Zuniga, a former senior State Department and National Security Council official, told the Journal that most countries willing to go along with U.S. demands would likely be “problematic.”

“But even they are asking, ‘What’s in it for us? Who’s going to pay for it? How am I going to explain the political burden of accepting people on behalf of the United States?’” Zuniga said.

Talks are currently being spearheaded by White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller, the architect behind Trump’s inhumane plan for massive deportations and known for his emotionally volatile run-ins with the press.

“Friendly reminder: If you illegally invaded our country the only ‘process’ you are entitled to is deportation,” Miller wrote on X Tuesday, advocating for the Trump administration to suspend due process to expedite the removal of alleged members of gangs the administration deems terrorist groups, as it did last month with the sudden removal of 261 alleged members of Tren de Aragua to El Salvador.

Deals with other countries may have been in the works for some time. U.S. conservatives began plotting to send deportees to Rwanda before Trump was even elected, copying a contentious plan from the U.K.’s conservative leadership to offload asylum-seekers there. The U.K.’s Rwanda plan, which has been in motion since 2022, has proved both inefficient and expensive, according to The Guardian.

Additionally, the U.S. government has previously raised concerns about human rights conditions in Rwanda, including reports of extrajudicial killings, arbitrary arrest and detainment, disappearances, and torture. The State Department reported similar conditions in Benin and Libya.

While these plans may have already been in the works, there may be a renewed sense of urgency after a judge’s decision barring the Trump administration from deporting people to El Salvador without first giving them an opportunity to challenge their removal.

Last week, U.S. District Court Judge Brian Murphy issued a temporary restraining order requiring the government to provide written notice and an opportunity for detainees to apply for protection before deporting them to a third country.

The order was a clear rebuke of Trump’s $6 million deal with Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele to accept deportees at the Latin American country’s Centro de Confinamiento del Terrorismo, or CECOT, a prison notorious for human rights abuses.

This wasn’t the first time that a judge challenged El Salvador as a destination for deportees. In a filing late last month, Judge James Boasberg said that by sending the prisoners to CECOT, the Trump administration had likely violated the Foreign Affairs Reform and Restructuring Act of 1998, which states that “it shall be the policy of the United States not to expel … any person to a country in which there are substantial grounds for believing the person would be in danger of being subjected to torture.”

The government admitted Monday that it had wrongly deported one Salvadoran national to El Salvador as a result of an “administrative error.” ICE was aware that a judge had previously ruled that the man could not be removed there for concerns that he’d be targeted by gang violence, but his name was mistakenly included as an alternate on a manifest for removal. A judge ruled that there would be no way to rescue the man from CECOT, as he was no longer in U.S. custody.

“Fertilization President” Trump Just Gutted Fertility Research

An entire research team at the CDC has been dismissed, thanks to Donald Trump’s cuts.

Donald Trump points and purses his lips.
Win McNamee/Getty Images

Despite dubbing himself the “Father of IVF,” Donald Trump actually won’t be funding federal infertility research.

The administration fired a team of researchers focused on infertility research and assisted reproductive technology Tuesday afternoon, the latest group to lose their jobs in sweeping new cuts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“It is vital that the CDC, our nation’s public health agency, employs doctors and scientists who understand infertility, a disease that impacts one in six people worldwide,” Barbara Collura, president and CEO of the national infertility group RESOLVE, said in a statement. “Following today’s layoffs at the CDC, there will be no experts on infertility who will be able to inform public policy, brief members of Congress, publish articles and reports, and advance public awareness on the causes and treatments for infertility.”

The team was responsible for tracking in vitro fertilization cycles and creating and maintaining infertility-related databases. Speaking with HuffPost’s Alanna Vagianos, Collura said that questions remain regarding the future of that data—if it will be updated, and who would be doing the updating.

“That’s a lot of information and knowledge that walked out the door today,” Collura said.

The cut comes barely a week after Trump referred to himself as the “fertilization president” during a Women’s History Month event. Trump bragged about his purported efforts to expand IVF access and promised that there would be “tremendous goodies in the bag for women,” including “the fertilization and all the other things we’re talking about.”

So far, the Trump administration—directed by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency—has fired more than 100,000 federal employees. But tens of thousands more government jobs are expected to be on the chopping block as Trump pursues a second round of “voluntary” buyouts.

More than 10,000 jobs are expected to be cut at the Department of Health and Human Services, which encompasses the CDC. HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has proposed downsizing the agency’s 82,000-person workforce by nearly a quarter. Other shuttered departments were responsible for research and policy recommendations on older adults, disabilities, HIV, minority health, mine safety, and smoking.

Tesla Global Sales Plummet as Outrage Over Elon Musk Grows

Tesla just suffered its biggest sales decline in history.

People protest in front of a Tesla dealership. One sign in the foreground reads "Impeach Pres. Musk."
FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/Getty Images

Sales of Elon Musk’s Tesla fell 13 percent in the first quarter of this year, representing the largest drop in deliveries in the company’s entire history. Deliveries dropped by more than 50,000 cars, to just 336,681 vehicles.

This was the worst quarter since 2022 for Tesla, as the company’s market cap also fell by $460 billion. 

The electric vehicle company has attributed the horrendous development to changes in the production for the Model Y that negatively affected deliveries. But this flop has been brewing for weeks. Tesla’s stock has lost 36 percent of its value since the year started. In March, it got so bad that Musk and Trump had a gaudy Tesla-themed photo op at the White House. The president even promised to buy one himself as a “show of confidence.” That confidence may be starting to erode. And it’s not just domestically: European Tesla sales have fallen by a staggering 43 percent.

This all comes as Musk’s far-right antics and DOGE’s hostile government takeover have (unsurprisingly) become synonymous with the prominent E.V. company he is in charge of. It might finally be catching up to him—and his pockets. The world’s richest man has lost over $100 billion from his own personal net worth since December.  

It’s also been reported that Musk may be stepping away from the Trump administration, a possible clue into just how urgent his business struggles are. But what “stepping away” actually means—and in what capacity—has yet to be determined.