Ahead of today's Super Tuesday, Donald Trump is once again using the border issue to scare his conservative majority-white base and is using those fears to spread baseless claims against rival Joe Biden.
Immigrants living in the U.S. are fearful of the "Trump Effect" The fear among undocumented immigrants living in the United States concerning President Donald Trump's border policy is palpable.
The legendary Don Cheto, host of a hugely popular Spanish morning radio show in the United States recently invited Hillary Clinton's vice presidential running mate Tim Kaine to participate in a live, on-air interview to discuss issues of the utmost importance to Latino voters in regards to Clinton campaign plans.
Hillary Clinton's lead over Donald Trump among Latino voters has become so pronounced if the election were held today the Democratic presidential nominee would sweep her rival in all 12 "battleground" states.
The Republican presidential candidate released a two-page memo Tuesday entitled "Compelling Mexico to Pay for the Wall" which outlines drastic efforts he would take if the neighboring country didn't agree to his proposal.
The Republican presidential front-runner, who once hosted DREAMers at his New York City penthouse, said that he wants "dreamers" to be born in the United States.
Jimmy Kimmel didn't hesitate to challenge Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump about his xenophobic and anti-immigrant comments on Wednesday night.
While much of presidential hopeful Donald Trump's immigration rhetoric focuses on "dangerous" and "illegal" Mexican immigrants and "anchor babies," fewer "birthright" children have been born to U.S.-dwelling undocumented immigrants. Meanwhile, Chinese undocumented immigrants now surpass Mexican documented immigrants regarding the number of new immigrants in the U.S.
Donald Trump, the current leader of the GOP presidential race, released an immigration position paper weeks ahead of schedule, detailing the billionaire candidate's stance on undocumented immigrants, birthright citizenship, and the economy. Needless to say, Trump's views -- even on paper -- are polarizing.
Donald Trump still leads the Republican field of presidential hopefuls going into late summer, and he has decided to wait until September to release details of his presidential platform, starting with immigration.
Donald Trump, the Republican presidential candidate who has proven to be a rabble-rouser within past weeks, is finally receiving inner-party reactions to his offensiveness and hatemongering.
Donald Trump, who's said Mexicans flow into the U.S. "like water" and "are killing us at the border,"took to the stage at the Phoenix Convention Center on Saturday, June 11th to discuss U.S. immigration policy. He also spoke at length about his intentions to maintain his stance on illegal immigration.