
Since his second term began in January, President Donald Trump‘s acceptance of emigration has decreased.
Four April national surveys revealed that the majority of voters no longer support Trump, especially when the White House has tried to keep Kilmar Abrego Garcia‘s story at the forefront of voters ‘ thoughts.
In March, Abrego Garcia was removed without receiving a fair hearing under the Alien Enemies Act, only to eventually be revealed that it was the consequence of an operational problem.
He has not been released from the big jail in El Salvador where he is being held despite a national court’s request that the United States help his return to the United States.
His legal situation has been the main immigration issue at the time, which could be to blame for Trump’s declining support for emigration, despite the White House’s repeated doubling down on Abrego Garcia’s crime at media presentations week after week.
In his first two months in office, Trump little scored more highly in a March surveys by the AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research than any other issue, especially business and the  business. He was surveyed at the time and received a 49 % approval rating for immigration among U.S. adults.
Only 41 % of Americans supported Trump’s emigration legislation, according to the most recent poll conducted by the Economist and YouGov between April 19 and April 22. 53 % of respondents in March had approved.
A mid-April poll by Reuters/Ipsos found that 45 % to 46 % of people supported and did not support Trump on this policy. Last month, support was higher: 49 % –44 %.
The sea had now started to shift in the first quarter of April. According to a CBS News/YouGov poll, Americans were evenly split between Trump and his immigration policy, with 50 % to 50 %.
US-NATIONAL TOURISM HAS A HIT UNDER TRUMP.
Trump received a 53%-47 % score in the CBS News/YouGov survey in March.
Quinnipiac recorded one of the biggest help splits between April 3 and April 7, with 45 % in favor and 50 % in opposition. That changed after Trump’s first week in office, when 46 % of voters supported and 46 % opposed his immigration policy.