Is America’s anti-immigrant fever finally starting to break?
A new poll reveals that most Americans view immigration positively. Support for Trump's restrictive immigration policies is declining. Even Republicans are shifting their views. Trump's harsh approach faces disapproval, especially among Hispanics....

A new Gallup poll shows that 79% of those polled — a record high — say immigration is good for the country, with only 17% saying it is bad. And the number of Americans who want less immigration is dropping fast. Only 30% now support more restrictions, compared to 55% in 2024.
These findings come against the backdrop of the cruelest crackdown on immigration in modern history and may indicate that America’s anti-immigrant fever is breaking.
Trump, however, just keeps doubling down. He now is on the cusp of building ICE into a domestic army with massive detention capabilities. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said this week that the public should expect more raids in more states. “We’re going to come harder and faster, and we’re going to take these criminals down with even more strength than we ever have before,” she said, even though ICE’s own data shows the vast majority of those arrested — 72% — have no criminal records.
Perhaps that’s why Americans are turning away from the notion that immigrants constitute an invading force to be repelled and removed.
That shift extends to Independents and Republicans. One of the most startling findings in the Gallup poll shows that 64% of Republicans say immigration is a net benefit to the country. Just a year ago that figure stood at 39%.

Only 4% of Republicans a year ago believed immigration should remain at current levels. That has now leapt to 36%. It seems unlikely that a shift of this magnitude is attributable only to GOP voters’ faith in Trump; otherwise, we would probably not see a small but growing share of Republican voters saying immigration levels should be increased.

That is affecting Trump’s approval ratings on his defining issue. Gallup found that 62% of the public (and 69% of independents) disapprove of his handling of immigration, with 45% disapproving strongly.
Unlike crackdowns from earlier eras, social media is playing a pivotal role in this one. Trump can’t control the narrative here against an endless stream of TikTok videos and Instagram Reels that show the brutal reality of roundups and raids, family separations, arrests and lockups.
Americans don’t want this, even if former President Joe Biden did make his share of mistakes on immigration. Among his biggest were allowing criminals to remain at large and neglecting the crisis at the border until it reached powder keg proportions.
And Trump’s swift action at the border paid off — and allayed the concerns of a majority of Americans. By June, illegal border crossings had plummeted to their lowest levels since the 1960s.

Instead of taking the win, Trump’s pendulum keeps swinging further to the right. Despite reports of horrific conditions at “Alligator Alcatraz,” the tented detention camp deep in the Florida Everglades, the White House is urging states to build their own versions. Red states have responded with gusto. “We don’t have alligators, but we have lots of bears,” an official for Alaska told Fox News’ Laura Ingraham. Representative Nancy Mace of South Carolina posted on X that her state has “a swamp and a dream. South Carolina’s gators are ready.”
Such comments reflect a disturbing, ride-‘em-cowboy attitude that may play to MAGA fanboys online, but is deeply out of sync with the public at large.
The result is a widening gap between the indiscriminate brutality of the Trump administration’s methods and what Americans are willing to tolerate. That gap will only grow larger, as will the inevitable backlash.
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