/
Given a chance, Trump will deport Haitians, Ohio-based activist says

Given a chance, Trump will deport Haitians, Ohio-based activist says


Given a chance, Trump will deport Haitians, Ohio-based activist says

An Ohio-based tea party activist says he is confident that Donald Trump will make good on his promise to send 20-thousand Haitians back home, if he returns to the White House.

With the election less than 50-days away Springfield, Ohio has become a symbol of the disastrous consequences of the Biden-Harris immigration policy. Former President Trump has promised to go to Springfield, despite the fact that the city's Republican mayor objects to the idea.

Trump has made it clear he will come to the people's rescue if he is elected in November.

"We're getting them out of our country. They came in illegally. They're destroying our country. We're getting them out. They're going to be brought back to the country from which they came."

Tom Zawistowski is President of the Ohio-based We the People Convention.   

"He has pledged to do that. He has plans to do that. They've actually got down and dirty into the details about, yes, we can do this."

Not only the Haitians

Trump also mentioned Venezuela in his Sept. 10 debate with Kamala Harris after social media claims that a Venezuelan gang had taken over an Aurora, Colorado apartment complex.

Aurora police arrested eight suspected members of the Tren de Aragua criminal group on Wednesday, Sept. 11., according to the BBC.

Ohio native Vivek Ramaswamy, once a Trump rival in the briefly contested GOP presidential race, says the people of Springfield should blame the Biden-Harris administration for the impact the migrants have had on city with 58,000 residents.

During an appearance on the Fox News Channel Ramaswamy didn't mince words.

"The ultimate blame lies at the feet of Kamala Harris and Joe Biden, who created these border and immigration policies that are causing places like Springfield, a place where I spent a lot of time as a kid, to now suffer."

Ramaswamy offers a plan

Ramaswamy believes there is one clear way to solve the migrant problem in Springfield and throughout the country.

"If you're going to be part of the welfare state or a customer of the U.S. entitlement state, you're not going to be able to come to this country legally. That's how we solve the problem."

Zawistowski says Trump has the support of the American people.

"The latest polls show 55% of Americans have no problem with deporting these people. That's a big jump from the past when oh, you were racist because you didn't let these people in. Yeah, people are finding out it's not racist to protect Americans and their rights and follow the law. That's not racist and so yes, I think Trump will do that. We must do that, and we need to demand that."