A stark divide has erupted within Trump's coalition over deportation strategy, with White House officials quietly urging Republicans to soften their immigration rhetoric even as a powerful coalition of Trump allies aggressively pushes for expanded ICE enforcement regardless of public opinion.
According to Politico, Trump supporters aligned with the newly formed Mass Deportation Coalition are "furious" over what they view as the administration's retreat from aggressive enforcement following Kristi Noem's ouster as DHS Secretary.
On Tuesday, White House Deputy Chief of Staff James Blair instructed House Republicans to temper their hardline rhetoric and focus messaging on deporting violent criminals. Blair reinforced the message on X, writing that Republicans are targeting "deporting the violent/criminal illegals that Joe Biden & the Democrats in Congress let in."
The coalition rejected this approach as politically insufficient. The group—anchored by former CBP Commissioner Mark Morgan, Blackwater founder Erik Prince, and conservative powerhouses including the Heritage Foundation and Claremont Institute—commissioned polling from one of Trump's top pollsters to argue that broader deportations will drive GOP electoral success in November. They plan to distribute this data to White House officials, agency heads, and every member of Congress.
"Overwhelmingly, Trump voters expect this from the administration. They don't just support it, they expect it," said Chris Chmielenski, president of the Immigration Accountability Project. "This is a good way to re-energize the base as we move into the midterms, the same way that Trump was able to do so in the lead up to the 2024 general election."
The internal pressure reflects a growing political fault line. Hispanic GOP lawmakers have warned the White House that aggressive mass deportations risk alienating the Hispanic voters whose support proved decisive in Trump's 2024 victory.
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) acknowledged the tension Tuesday, conceding there has been a "hiccup" with Hispanic and other voters who view DHS operations as "overzealous." Johnson insisted the administration is in "course-correction mode," attempting to navigate between energizing Trump's hardline base and preserving Hispanic support critical for midterm success.
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