The Democrats Also Want to Deport You
On immigration policy, Donald Trump isn’t as radically different from Barack Obama and Joe Biden as his inflammatory rhetoric suggests. Each has built upon his predecessor’s efforts to make border militarization and mass deportations the norm.

US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, along with other federal law enforcement agencies, attend a pre-enforcement meeting in Chicago on Sunday, January 26, 2025. (Christopher Dilts / Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Imagine this: You’re sitting in your living room when an earthquake hits. You snatch up your children and dash into the street. Seconds later, the building collapses. You’re alive but are now homeless. The kids’ school is also destroyed, as well as your jobsite. Reconstruction in Port-au-Prince will take years, if it ever happens at all. The only option is to leave.
You cram your children into a boat with dozens of other Haitians and set off toward Florida. But before you see land, the US Coast Guard catches the boat. Somewhere in the detention process, you’re blindfolded. When it’s taken off again, you are not in the United States but Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Such a scenario could become commonplace. Last week, Donald Trump signed an executive order to indefinitely detain as many as 30,000 migrants in Guantanamo. It is a horrifying prospect, a brazen and shameless attempt to symbolically conflate the act of migration with terrorism.