Why is Trump halting immigration applications from 19 countries? - podcast episode cover

Why is Trump halting immigration applications from 19 countries?

Dec 03, 202531 min
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Episode description

President Donald Trump has intensified his anti-immigration stance, pausing all immigration applications from 19 countries. On Tuesday he singled out Somali communities in remarks that have drawn widespread criticism from across the world.

In this podcast, Anushka Asthana and Matt Frei break down what he said, why his crackdown on immigration has escalated over recent days, and why this rhetoric is driving deep anxiety among many Americans. We explore the political context, human consequences, and the broader implications for immigrant communities across the country.

Transcript

I mean, these are people who came when the civil war was at its height in Somalia in the 1990s. These are not largely people who have come in the last few years. They want to do a crackdown there. And we've already seen, haven't we, the ICE raids around the country, people being literally snatched off the streets. And obviously they're getting very worried in Minnesota right now. Hello and welcome to this week's edition of Trump World. Anushka, how was your

Thanksgiving? Oh, it was lovely. Thank you, Matt. I went to a beautiful place called Duck in North Carolina. You have a Turkey in duck. Very appropriate. Amazing. And it was my first Thanksgiving in America. I've always done Thanksgiving in the UK actually, but I didn't try. Have you ever tried? I forget what it is now with the marshmallows. Have you ever? It's sweet potatoes, isn't it? Have you ever? Tried I make it, it's my signature dish and it is are. You serious?

I can't even imagine liking it. It's not so disgusting. Because it's really quite disgusting in some ways, because it's like chemistry on top of vegetables. I mean, marshmallows are probably the worst thing that that mankind can ingest. Well, today's not the day to discuss American food, but I have to say it's been one of the things I've found most interesting since I've been here. Now, do you know what Donald

Trump did for Thanksgiving? Well, he first of all, of course, he pardoned his Turkey, the White House Turkey, the day before. And then I'm assuming that he had a sumptuous Turkey dinner at Mar a Lago. But actually what he really did, what really gives him a great amount of joy, is to go on social media and rant.

And this is what he said. So this is what other people are tucking into their Turkey, adding the condiments, you know, holding hands around the table and saying thank you to all the great things that have happened in that year. Donald Trump said this only and then in caps. Reverse migration can fully cure this situation. Other than that, happy Thanksgiving to all except those that hate, steal, murder and destroy everything that America stands for. You won't be here for long.

End of quote, end of social media post. So I guess you know he never takes any time off work, does he? He's always on the job. Yesterday I was watching the very long as usual, cabinet meeting by Donald Trump and then he took this turn about Somali people and let's just listen to what he said. I don't want him in our country. I'll be honest with you, OK? Somebody would say, oh, that's not politically correct. I don't care. I don't want him in our country.

Now we actually aren't playing all of it, not because we want to sanitize it, but because it is just so offensive and people don't really want to listen to all of it. He talked about people in Somalia being garbage. He, he has this real thing for Representative Ilan Omar, who is AUS citizen by the way, but he talks about people like her, other people from the Somali community going home. Like I said, he called them garbage. I mean, Matt, you have seen so much, you have heard so much.

Do you still have the capacity to be shocked? Yeah, I mean, I think that's the whole point, isn't it? Just as just when you're getting used to the new normal of something that Trump has said, he says something else that

makes you pay attention. It's all part of his attentional economy, the way he, you know, grabs the headlines and and grabs our minds and deflects perhaps from things that he doesn't want to talk about like, you know, Jeffrey Epstein or the fairly miserable state of the economy or, you know, the cost of living or inflation, things like that. So he's very good at making everyone pivot to the thing he

wants us all to talk about. Just want to say about the Afghan, the 29 year old Afghan man who, by the way, you know, is, is a husband and a father of kids who drove all the way, you know, across the country to, you know, allegedly commit this crime, to which he, by the way, has pleaded not guilty. He worked for the American forces while they were occupying Afghanistan for I think almost a decade, including at some stage

for the CIA. He was brought in under a scheme that was started by Joe Biden after the chaotic departure from Afghanistan. And then actually, his asylum claim was approved while Trump was in office because President Trump did go out of his way to blame, you know, Afghans in, you know, this guy in particular, obviously, but also Afghans in general for having been brought into, you know, into America by Joe Biden. But actually, let's not forget

that it was actually President Trump who first made the suggestion that America should leave Afghanistan many years ago. And this guy had his asylum, say, asylum papers approved under Trump when he was president this year. Having said that, you know, this is an excuse for Donald Trump yet again to unleash on people that he likes to unleash on. And he does this, you know, at regular intervals. But every time he does it, it

gets more violent. I don't think it's a knee jerk reaction to what happened in Washington, DC last week. I think it is the absolute driving ideology of this government to crackdown on immigration in this way. But they are obviously using this as what they see as an opportunity. And, you know, I mean, let's just pause for a minute and just just talk about the two victims in all of this. Sarah Beckstrom, who was killed, was only 20, and Andrew Wolf, 24, has been fighting for his

life. It was a terrible, terrible crime, as you say. He has pleaded not guilty to this, But it was a terrible crime. But I was standing in the briefing room in the White House on Monday, and I was packed in 'cause it's always completely packed with journalists. And Caroline Leavitt, the press secretary, began by talking about the two National Guard officers who were killed and obviously very, very badly injured. And then she turned and she turned to what they really want to talk about.

And I have to say, Matt, I've, I'm not easily shocked. I would like to say, but I felt like really shocked by what I was hearing. I was standing there, You know, I mean, I don't know if this makes a difference or not. You don't need to be an immigrant or a child of an immigrant to be shocked. But as a child of an immigrant, maybe I felt it even slightly sharper than I might have done.

She talked about the disorder and violence, basically arguing this was unleashed by all Afghans, in fact, not just all Afghans. They were talking about immigration much more broadly by that. She was talking about people draining welfare. I think later on we'll get to some of the statistics about the reality of the economic impact of immigration. It came alongside. And I just want to read this out and then I just want to ask you about it.

Christy Noem, the secretary for Homeland Security, went on Twitter. And again, capacity to be shocked you think be numbed after 20 odd years as a journalist. Still, I'm I'm just totally shocked by it. I just met with the president. I'm, I'm recommending a full travel ban on every damned country that's been flooding our nation with killers, leechers

and entitlement junkies. Our forefathers built this nation on blood, sweat and the unyielding love of freedom, not for foreign invaders to slaughter our heroes, suck dry our hard earned tax dollars, or snatch the benefits owed to Americans. We don't want them, not one. And then yesterday, Donald Trump turning this to Somalis living in Minnesota. There's, he's talking about revoking their temporary protected status, which is actually, we think, probably only relevant for a few hundred

of the Somali community. The vast majority of them are American citizens, many of them born and bred in America. And he has absolutely gone for them in a kind of really shocking way. I mean, what do you think the impact of this will be for many of people in that community? And do you agree with me that it's not a knee jerk reaction that this runs through the thread of what they want to do

as a government? Well, I mean, remember, Donald Trump started his first political campaign in 2015 when he came down the golden escalator in Trump Tower on 5th Ave. with a speech about Mexicans being, you know, being murderers and rapists and bad hombres. And some of them are good people, he acknowledged. But that that was his calling card to get into politics.

That and the Bertha campaign against President Obama famously claimed that he shouldn't have been president because he was born outside America, which of course, was nonsense. But he made the president proffer his birth certificate to prove him wrong. That's how he started. That's how it all began, you know, 10 years ago. So he's been doing this ever since. But as soon as he got into office in 2017, the first thing he did was ban immigrants from from visitors from Muslim

countries. He then put the whole green card process on hold. I know this because I was applying for a green card at the time because I thought I might want to go back to America at some stage. And suddenly my lawyer ran and said it's all been frozen. So he's been messing with, you know, different levels of immigration, asylum seekers from desperate parts of the world, people who just want to work in America.

He's been doing it all along. What's different now, I think Anushka, is that it's, first of all, it's confusing. It's a bit like the tariff policy. We don't really, no one really knows where they stand at the moment because it's also raw. And remember, this is policy that could potentially undo years of, you know, of paying tons of money and going to lawyers, you know, suddenly upended or maybe not. You know, it'll be challenged in

the courts, I'm sure. Will the Supreme Court then rule with those courts or rule against them? We don't know. But if you're someone who's lived in the country, you know, legitimately, let alone illegitimately, you're going to feel really scared. So I think consider, I mean, for a nation that is based on bringing bring me your huddled masses in the famous inscription, you know, the Statue of Liberty, that is based on immigration. And this is one of the joys of

America, one of its strengths. This is what had made America great. To see the whole structure of immigration undermined like this I find deeply troubling. And I'm not even living there as an immigrant. Obviously the reaction this week has been specific things.

They're going to re examine all of the asylum claims of the Afghans who came in 2021 and that, as you say, the actual decision on this man who has been suspected in this crime was made under Trump. But the scheme, I think it was called Operation Allies Welcome happened under Joe Biden and, you know, and suddenly all of them are being tarred like this.

So that's all being examined. Caroline Leavitt seemed to suggest that there had been national security warnings to the White House under Biden. I wrote to them and asked them about that because she said reportedly, as in in the newspapers, I wrote to the White House and said, well, you must know about it if it was a warning to government. And they just directed me back to Caroline Leavitt's words.

So no more detail on that. They're also, this is what he says, pausing all migration from third world countries. I mean, is there a kind of particular, you know, definition of that? And then they're warning threatening a crackdown on the Somali population in Minnesota. They're talking about a case that involved fraud. There were dozens of Somalis who were, you know, caught up in

that. And they're using that as an excuse to say this huge settled population, which, by the way, the vast majority of has been there for decades. I mean, these are people who came when the civil war was at its height in Somalia in the 1990s. These are not largely people who have come in the last few years. They want to do a crackdown there. And we've already seen, haven't we, the ICE raids around the country, people being literally snatched off the streets.

And obviously they're getting very worried in Minnesota right now. So, so the the this threatened crackdown is in Minneapolis and Saint Paul. Let's just hear how the Democratic mayors have reacted to this. Our values and our commitment to the Somali community, to every community of immigrants and people in our city is rock solid and will be unwavering. Our police, many of whom are Somali themselves, are trusted

partners in keeping people safe. They will not collaborate with any federal agency around doing immigration enforcement work. Our city staff and our law enforcement will not ask the question as to whether an individual is documented or not. And by the way, there are more than 80,000 Somali people living in mini in Minnesota. Almost all of them are both

documented and citizens. The last thing that we need is federal agents coming here pretending that we should be afraid of somebody just based on the color of their skin, just based on what they look like, just based on what country their ancestors claimed as a as as honor, as a motherland.

I mean, you know, what the mayor just referred to is essentially that if you look, if you look different, you know, I mean, different as in if you have dark skin, whether it's from Africa or Latin America, you know, forget whether you're a convicted criminal or not, or whether you're there legally as an American citizen, you run the risk of getting arrested by ICE

officials. And then you're in this sort of, you know, terrible maelstrom of of of legal fees and going to judges and lawyers to try and get out of detention or deportation. And that's just not happened in such a random way before. And of course, I think a lot of it. Anushka, I wonder what you think is driven by the ideologue behind Donald Trump on that is immigration 1. Stephen Miller, what do you think? Yeah, this is his deputy chief of staff. And I think, you know, his

writing is all over this. And as I said before, not a new thing, something you reported on greatly in Trump 1.0. And now we're appointing again, reporting again on in Trump 2.0 all over the executive orders. I mean, they had on day one signing executive orders talking about an emergency on the

southern border, an invasion. And I was really interested in a response that Stephen Miller actually made on social media to a Wall Street Journal, which is a conservative newspaper article about all of this, which basically made the point that you don't punish everybody for one crime. You don't punish an entire, you know, population. And also warnings about the fact that actually, and again, we'll come to these stats, Immigration has been a huge economic boom

for America over many years. And there is a positive to it. And he basically wrote back and said that this was the kind of big lie, if you like, about immigration, this idea that you're importing individuals. He basically said no, no, you're importing societies and made absolutely clear that he thought that the society where these people were coming from were broken and therefore they would break American Society. And that is the thing that runs through all of this.

I mean, my nature is to look at these things, not, not what Stephen Miller says, but you know, what the government is doing and assume that there isn't a kind of gobbling racist ideology below it. But it is quite hard to think that when you hear what they're saying again and again. And, you know, just one of the examples of what they did with an executive order immediately and now they're really hammering down on this is they've basically closed the door.

This is a predominantly Christian country that has basically closed the door on people fleeing persecution. Their target for 2026 was is 7 1/2 thousand and Caroline Levitt was very open about this at the briefing this week. Vast majority of them only white people fleeing discrimination, you know, is what they say. Farmers from South Africa, which I, which I do think really shows you this. They want to do stuff retrospectively.

They want to review green cards. Trump says he wants to take the permanent out of permanent residency. I mean, I mean, the Somali population in Minnesota, which is very large because a lot of people settled and then people came to the same place, lots of young people, lots of people have been reacting to this. I think people are quite bemused almost about his obsession, obsession about this particular

population. I mean, there's lots of humour if people are looking for it on TikTok and Instagram, people making fun of him over all of this. And a lot of these people are naturalised citizens or, or just born and bred Americans. And, you know, it's, it's just worth just pausing for a minute. The thing that he's talking about, temporary protected status, TPS, is something that is put in place for people who have come from countries where, you know, there are ongoing civil wars.

Things are really still very unstable. One big population is Haitian communities around America. I did, you know, with the team, we went to Charlotte. Roy eating the. Dog, you know, which Donald Trump basically repeated this disgusting lion myth about eating their pets in Springfield. OH, I, I, I went to Charleroi in Pennsylvania about this. People absolutely terrified because you talk about TPS like

it's just a new thing. People had been there, you know, since, you know, 2010 in the case of Haiti. But but I almost don't want to talk too much about TPS because it's not really about TPS because the vast majority of Somalis in America are Americans. And, you know, they don't want you to think about that or know that. And they're just going after

them in a very brutal way. I mean, it is worth saying and, and we can both talk about this is, is obviously people have a right to be upset and angry and scared about immigration levels. And there was huge immigration over the southern border under the Joe Biden years. And, and one of the things they did was they ended up with a large amount of immigration in some of the more Democratic cities. And actually the population was shocked by that.

Do you think that was a big contributor to Donald Trump winning again? Oh, absolutely. I mean, you know, the one thing I heard throughout the campaign was cost of living, immigration, cost of living immigration over and over again. And you know, from some Republicans, it was on the immigration front. If this isn't sorted out, if he doesn't come into office again, this will be, this will spill the end of the American way of

life. It'll be the end of our Republic. It'll be the end of democracy. And I think one of the things that we fail to appreciate in this nation of immigrants founded on immigration is that the numbers of people coming across from South of the border, from the Western Hemisphere, from Latin America, where they really only speak one language. I mean, it's mostly Spanish. Some of them, obviously in Brazil, speak Portuguese.

That has changed the kind of culture of America more than previous waves of immigration from different countries. You had the Irish and for that, of course, the English. Then you had the Italians and then you had people from all over Europe and there were sort of pockets of immigration and they've still left their imprints. So Minnesota, which he talked about earlier, which has a big Somali community, also had a big German community.

And you can still see the evidence of that, you know, in in Saint Paul and Minneapolis, the same thing in Wisconsin, lots of German themed restaurants with waitresses wearing dundles and so on. But but nothing was sort of overwhelming. And I think for people, if you talk to people in the Trump administration and you talk to Republicans who want to turn the clock back to the 1950s and 60s, this isn't just about a perceived alleged racism.

It's also about a panic, an actual panic that they're being overwhelmed by a Spanish speaking culture and civilization. And if you go to, you know, Texas or to California or to Florida and you, you ring up any public agency, what you hear on the phone in Spanish is. Or prima Uno para Ingles E dos para espanol. The first language of reference is Spanish. You press 1 to speak English, press 2 to continue in Spanish.

And that is, it's kind of, it's something that a lot of Americans aren't used to. And I want to ask you and Uska, as someone who's just arrived in America, you've only been there a couple of months with your family. Does this stuff, does this immigration stuff make you personally feel uncomfortable about being there?

Well, I certainly I have been surprised by how things are a lot worse than I expected them to be when I came and how scared people are, people who are legally in this country are worried about this because nobody knows what is going to happen at any moment. And yeah, I think it is. That's the. Point of the Trump polity to make people feel insecure, even if they've been there for years

as American citizens. Yeah, and also I think he is responding to a genuine fear in the country about the levels of immigration. And you know, I often think about this, comparing it to reporting I've done in the UK. I remember in 2016 making a film about immigration ahead of Brexit. And I went to six different parts of the country and I heard a lot of people who were really,

really scared about immigration. I remember being on an open top UKIP bus when I was reporting, talking to UKIP politicians and people were cheering this open top bus. And I remember standing in a square in Lee in the Northwest and at me about immigration, including, by the way, one person who was Polish and one person who was a black woman who was, you know, the child of immigrants. And I just remember thinking to myself, like, obviously, and I would like to talk about some of the stats.

Obviously some of the things that people are scared about are not true, but some of the things that people are scared about are true. You know, I went to Peterborough, where the level of scale of immigration had been so fast and so kind of discombobulating for the local population. But people genuinely had seen everything change around them, the type of shops that were

around them. I went to the doctor's surgery, and the doctors were like, we're very pro immigration, but it has really changed the challenges that we're trying to face with here. The school had had more churn. And when you look at the stats, it's very easy to just sort of scream about one side or the other, you know, scream falsely as some in Trump's administration do, that they're

taking all our benefits. I mean, I think we could actually Fact Check. I think Donald Trump talked about immigrants, sort of, you know. Earning. 30,000 and taking $50,000, I think we can quite flatly say that is not true. If you look at cost and benefit in that way, immigrants hugely contribute to society in America. They're also 60% less likely, by the way, to commit crimes than people who are born Americans. But, but they wouldn't have you think that.

But it's also true that, you know, the people who shout at the other end of the spectrum on this, they just put in more money. And it's completely untrue that there are any challenges. Also not true, you know, because many of those statistics don't take into account the impact on public services, the impact on housing, other things that are quite hard for you to kind of, you know, get your teeth around. But but America has nevertheless been built on immigration.

The thing I find really quite hard to kind of fathom, which is quite different I guess to the UK, is that every single person who's talking about how immigrants are ruining our country is the, you know. Daughter or son? Of immigrants somewhere along the line and and like I say, the stats do show they do show that overall immigration has brought economic, you know booms to America, but you can't. You can't, you can't imagine America without it.

But I mean, in, in terms of what you've described, you experienced when you were, you know, doing your films and you were reporting in Britain about immigration and the rise of the Brexit Party, now the Reform Party. Of course, in Germany it's very similar. And in France, you know, and in Italy, every country is dealing with the issue of immigration in a slightly different way. And in every country there's a common theme.

And that includes the United States, where you have communities where immigrants have suddenly arrived in very large numbers. The feelings against them are much stronger than they are in big cities like New York or London or, you know, or Berlin or Paris, where you've always had a real melting pot of different societies and different immigrants in different communities.

And it's that sort of rapid arrival, you know, whether it's a town in the northeast of England or somewhere in the middle of Kentucky, where people show up suddenly and there's a quorum of them and they speak a different language and they worship in a slightly different way.

That is where you have an issue. And I think what I always thought was true about America, and maybe it's no longer true, was that America could filter these people coming in, these outsiders, and say, this is what we're all about as long as you sign up to that, You know, that a Forbes piece of paper, the Constitution, which of course everyone's, you know, swears allegiance to, when they become naturalized, I find that term

extraordinary. Naturalized Americans. In other words, they become citizens. You defend the Constitution that defends your right to be yourself and to be different. That was the key. And no other country had that recipe for bringing people in. And I think fundamentally that is now what is at stake across the board. The big question, though? Is people have very genuine fears and the reason they do is because their own lives have become very insecure.

You know, economic affordability is clearly a huge thing here in the US. The Republicans have actually won an election in Tennessee overnight, but by a massively reduced margin than they would have done. So I think Democrats in this country are quite hopeful that there may be an answer. But all the world over, including Keir Starmer in the UK, grappling with how do we

deal with immigration? I mean, just one thing in terms of a response from the left, I think this kind of focus on affordability, you know, is their best hope in a way. I always remember I was talking about speaking to people all over the country in the UK about immigration. And I always remember this woman just saying to me, my daughter hasn't got a school place. My daughter hasn't got a school place. And it's the immigrants. It's the immigrants. And I was thinking there's a way

to solve this. Make sure her daughter has a school place, solve the problems that people are feeling insecure about. And then you will get less of this anger and this hatred. But also, it is also, you know, OK for people to feel angry and upset about immigration and for us to, you know, talk about how they can deal with that. What's not OK is to an attack an entire population in the way, as is happening right now and make people feel just quite so

scared. And that could be politically interesting because Donald Trump won a lot of votes from Hispanic voters in the last election. And the early signs and particularly in those recent elections that we've talked about in recent weeks where, you know, Zoran Mamdani and others won against Republicans, is that actually, it does look like there is a shift away from Trump with those Hispanic voters.

And there was one thing the president said yesterday that I thought, oh, you've got to be careful saying things like this. He said affordability is a hoax. And what he meant by that was people are not feeling, you know, we're, we're solving it all. People can't afford things.

The broad team, I think. For all this, whether you're talking about this country or the United States, is that the big conversation these days is between societies that we want want to become more closed and those that are still happy to be open, whether it's to immigration or to trade or to

international institutions. And America, a country that had always been, for better or for worse, an example of openness, has done the opposite, battened down the hatches, pulled up the drawbridge, whether it's on trade or on on immigration or an engagement with the rest of the planet in international institutions. That is really, I think for me, the essence of Trumpism. And, you know, and it's a new reality that we all have to get used to.

And in various ways, different foreign leaders are trying to prize those doors open again. But ultimately, the, the, you know, the, the, the direction is to close them. But all this annushka is detracting from the, the, the spirit of the season, which of course, is not just Thanksgiving, but, you know, you've got Christmas coming up. I can only imagine looking at the Oval Office, that it'll be even richer and more, you know, undigestible than it has been on

previous occasions. Yeah. I mean the the White House. Decorations are quite something. 75 wreaths, 51 Christmas trees, 700 feet of Garland, 2000 strands of light. More than this is a good one. 10,000 butterflies and especially for you Matt. 120 pounds. 10,000 butterflies are these. Are these chocolate butterflies or real butterflies? Or Mar a Lago Gold butter? Yeah, this has got.

Question mark question mark question mark on my link can Can somebody let me know are they real butterflies? I have to say one of the. One of the great, you know, we take a lot of spend a lot of time on this podcast talking about stuff we don't particularly like. One thing I really, really liked about America and I really miss is this sort of other customs, the, the traditions. And you know, I'm not a believer or I'm nominally Christian.

I think that's what it says on my birth certificate. But I, I go to church to look at some nice windows or art and, and maybe listen to a bit of music. But I'm not even remotely religious, but I do get swept up in that spirit at this time of year. And of course, it's not all religious. Some of it is very secular, like Thanksgiving. But these sort of holidays, they really punctuate an American

calendar. And again, it's so weird that you have an administration that's prepared to shred all the things that we've got used to, to tear up the Constitution to tiny little pieces and challenge all the nostrums and all the things that many people took for granted. But at the same time, you still got all these traditions, and America is sort of baked in in those traditions, even if they're sometimes involve putting marshmallows on top of sweet potatoes. That's also a tradition.

That is it. For this week, I do hope that people are enjoying the show. If they are, they can subscribe, they can follow. It would be hugely, hugely appreciated by us if you do that. You can also use the comments section wherever you watch or listen to send us comments and we can talk about some of them on here. We can indeed. That's all from us. Thanks For me, Matt. In London, I'm me, Anushka. In Washington, DC, See you next week. See you next week.

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