Trump’s Deportation Ultimatum: Expel Every ‘Third Worlder, Illegal, and America-Hating Visa Holder’?

Washington, D.C. – President Donald Trump issued a scorching warning on December 13, 2025, vowing to deport “every single third worlder, illegal, and America hating visa holder” in a blistering escalation of his immigration crackdown. The remarks, delivered during a Mar-a-Lago address to GOP lawmakers, build on his November 28 Truth Social post pausing migration from “third world countries” following a fatal D.C. National Guard shooting linked to an Afghan national. “These people hate us—they steal, murder, and destroy everything we stand for,” Trump thundered, demanding denaturalization for those “undermining domestic tranquility” and expulsion of any foreign national deemed a “public charge, security risk, or non-compatible with Western civilization.”

The pledge signals a radical expansion beyond the 600,000 deportations notched since January, targeting long-term residents, green card holders, and visa overstays from 19 “high-risk” nations like Somalia, Yemen, and Haiti. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who spearheaded the revocation of 85,000 visas, echoed the call: “No more sanctuary for those who reject our values.” Early actions include probes into 233,000 refugees admitted under Biden and reviews of TPS for 700,000 holders, potentially stripping protections from Dreamers and Ukrainians alike.

Supporters in Rust Belt towns and border states hail it as overdue reckoning. “I’m with Trump—enough is enough,” said a Phoenix construction worker, citing polls where 62% back mass removals to curb fentanyl deaths and wage suppression. The administration projects 1.5 million expulsions by mid-2026, funneling billions into ICE raids and third-country dumps.

Human rights groups, however, decry it as xenophobic overreach. Amnesty International labeled the rhetoric “disinformation and hate,” warning of family separations and economic sabotage in immigrant-heavy sectors. Lawsuits from the ACLU and CAIR are mounting, challenging the policy’s constitutionality and echoing failed 2017 travel ban fights. As Trump’s approval on immigration hits 58%, this “deport them all” edict tests his mandate’s limits: A fortress rebuilt, or a nation fractured? With 2026 midterms looming, the ultimatum isn’t just words—it’s a war cry reshaping America’s mosaic.

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