close
close
Trump’s deportation plans worry families with relatives in the United States illegally

Trump’s deportation plans worry families with relatives in the United States illegally

By GABRIEL SANDOVAL

PHOENIX (AP) — Jocelyn Ruiz remembers when her fifth-grade teacher warned the class about large-scale fires. patrols that would target immigrants in Arizona’s largest metropolitan area. She asked her mother about it and discovered a family secret.

Ruiz’s mother had entered the United States illegally and left Mexico a decade earlier in search of a better life.

Ruiz, who was born in California and grew up in the Phoenix area, at the time was plagued by concern that her mother could be deported at any moment, despite having no criminal record. Ruiz, his two younger brothers and his parents quietly persevered, never discussing their mixed immigration status. They lived “like Americans,” he said.

Jocelyn Ruiz, 26, photographed in Tempe, Arizona.
Jocelyn Ruiz, 26, photographed in Tempe, Arizona, on Tuesday, October 22, 2024, is a US citizen who discovered a family secret that her mother could be deported at any time. (AP Photo/Matt York)

More than 22 million people live in an American household where at least one occupant is in the country illegally, according to an analysis from the Pew Research Center from 2022 census data. That represents almost 5% of households across the United States and 5.5% in Arizona, a battleground state where the Latino vote could be key.

If Donald Trump is elected and fulfills his campaign promise to carry out The largest deportation operation in United States history.Not only could it disrupt the lives of the 11 million people the U.S. Census Bureau estimates are living in the United States illegally, but it could also devastate U.S. citizens in their families.

He immigration issue has been a cornerstone of Trump’s platform since he promised to “build a big wall” in 2015 when he announced his first Republican campaign for president. and despite survey showing Although the economy is a top concern for voters, Trump remains obsessed with the issue, criticizing the Biden administration’s handling of the southern border as an existential threat to American society as Day of the Dead approaches. elections.

Trump’s plans to crack down have motivated some mixed-status families to speak out. America’s success depends on the contributions of immigrants, they argue, and the people who do this work deserve a path to legal residency or citizenship.

Others choose to remain silent, hoping to evade attention.

And there are some who support Trump, although they themselves could become targets for deportation.

Back To Top