Why does mass deportation remain popular? Here are some polling results and a speculation of what the Trump administration may be politically astute to push the myth of non-citizens voting. Psychologically, many older Americans likely think that foreign-born persons are effectively “voting”, at least figuratively in how we live.
Recent polls (April and May) show continued support for Trump’s deportation campaign, which the White House says is targeted at all unauthorized persons. An April Pew poll showed that those who say that deportation has gone too far edged about 50% — yet that confirms that even after Minneapolis the deportation effort gets support. In fact, the Pew poll shows that the share of Republicans who say that Trump has do too little rose from 16% in October 2026 to 28% in April 2026.
The majority of white respondents are supportive of Trump’s policy. Black (69%), Hispanic (65%) and Asian (58%) adults are more likely than White adults (45%) to say that deportation has gone to far.
The voting fraud issue
52% of Republicans say they are concerned that some ineligible people will be allowed to vote in November (link unavailable).
It is useful to see how the myth of non-citizens voting (and unauthorized persons in particular) has been concocted by the administration and MAGA on the foundation of a real, persistent and persuasive concern that immigration overall waters down the sovereignty of American citizens, if sovereignty is taken as a psychological state that can be seized by the visible presence of foreign-born. A hallmark event of sovereignty is voting. If you don’t have foreign-born peers your imagination can run wild about voting abuse.
In a 2022 survey, 43% of all Americans aged 18-29 report a friendship network with some racial or ethnic diversity, but that percentage drops among older Americans to 37% of Americans aged 30-49, 32% of Americans aged 50-64, and 24% of Americans aged 65 or older. This means that relatively few mature white Americans have no way through social networks to discern how foreign-born persons behave. I expect mature white Americans outside traditional immigrant-rich cities grew up with essentially zero peer contact with foreign-born persons.
Thus, psychologically, many older Americans think that foreign-born persons are effectively “voting”, at least figuratively in how we live.