Trump’s Immigration Public Relations Campaign Moves to a New Militarized Stage
The Trump government’s videos seem designed to encourage undocumented immigrants to depart the nation, while also indicating that the administration will not put up with opposition.
A slow-motion film showing masked, camouflaged federal officials handcuffing and arresting individuals in Los Angeles. A noir-inspired montage of people setting fire to automobiles and American flags, cut to seem like a preview for a dystopian film. An image of soldiers with assault rifles standing watch while federal agents restrain a man.

In an effort to demonstrate that it will not tolerate opposition to its aggressive goal of mass deportations, President Trump’s administration has also launched a parallel visual campaign as he deployed the National Guard and US Marines in response to protests against immigration enforcement in Los Angeles.
Since protests began last week in reaction to an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operation in Los Angeles’s garment area, the federal government’s official media channels have been disseminating images and videos—some of which were originally posted by right-wing influencers—that highlight the arrest of migrants and display U.S. military strength.
Pete Hegseth, the Defense Secretary, is one of the people who has supported the clampdown by sharing a picture of a line of National Guard troops glaring at a masked protester.
Images posted by government officials have been spread throughout the conservative media landscape, creating a flood of online messaging that frames the immigration impasse as a battle to protect America from an invasion.
This is the most recent version of a sinister, intense public relations campaign that Trump’s team launched immediately after he regained power, inundating digital platforms with mug shots of arrested migrants, images of chained deportees, and stylized representations of federal law enforcement.
According to experts, a visual communications plan aimed at persuading undocumented immigrants to leave the country has merged with a militarized pressure campaign that also seems designed to suppress dissent.
Ruth Ben-Ghiat, a New York University professor who studies propaganda and authoritarianism, stated, “It’s a classic authoritarian script,” pointing out that Mr. Trump’s closest advisors have referred to immigrants and protestors using wartime terminology such as “insurrectionists” and “invasion.”
Serious violence has characterized some of the protests that have taken place in cities around the nation in recent days, including instances of demonstrators throwing things at law enforcement and setting self-driving cars on fire. The Los Angeles Police Department reported in a Monday statement that officers had experienced “significant acts of violence, vandalism, and looting.”

However, detractors argued that the White House was exacerbating an already volatile circumstance by magnifying the extent of the disturbances and amplifying incendiary imagery, such as repeatedly highlighting people waving Mexican flags.
Leti Volpp, a University of California, Berkeley immigration law professor, stated, “The administration is creating the visual spectacle to accompany its claim of an ‘insurrection’ demanding a militarized response.” “The administration wants the American public to take away from these videos the sense that immigrants are completely dehumanized ‘bad people’ who need to be removed from this country; their continued presence threatens law and order.”
In a statement, White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson stated, “President Trump will always support the right of Americans to peacefully make their voices heard.”
“But when violent rioters assault law enforcement, ignite vehicles, and partake in unlawful mayhem,” she stated, “President Trump won’t think twice about intervening.”
Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, supported Mr. Trump’s immigration strategies and his reaction to the protest during a press briefing on Wednesday. She was accompanied by images of a protester waving a Mexican flag against a backdrop of smoke-filled skies and police cars.
“Let this be an unequivocal message to left-wing radicals in other parts of the country who are thinking of copy-catting the violence in an effort to stop this administration’s mass deportation efforts: You will not succeed,” Ms. Leavitt said.
The removal of illegal immigrants has been portrayed by the administration as a patriotic effort. The Homeland Security Department published a WWII-style graphic on Wednesday, urging the public to assist in “locating and arresting illegal aliens.”
C. Jay Engel, a podcaster who hosts a Christian nationalist program and identifies as a supporter of the “Old American Right,” first shared the image. He has emphasized the idea of “Heritage America,” which, as he stated on social media, confirms “the domination and pre-eminence of the European derived peoples, their institutions, and their way of life.”
In response to a query regarding the source of the photograph, Tricia McLaughlin, a representative for the Homeland Security Department, stated, “Every American citizen should support federal law enforcement in their just effort to deport criminal illegal alien invaders from our country.”
The White House’s visual campaign has targeted two groups since its inception: the migrants, whom officials hope to convince to willingly depart the country, and Mr. Trump’s supporters, who expect him to fulfill his promise to deport millions of undocumented immigrants.

When combined, the images and films shared by the administration since the beginning of the year indicate that Mr. Trump is well on his way to achieving a record number of deportations.
In reality, the administration is far behind its objective even as ICE has increased its arrests under severe coercion from Trump officials. Internal government data obtained by The New York Times shows that since Mr. Trump resumed office, over 200,000 unauthorized persons in the United States have been returned to their home or a third nation. This is a fraction of the 1.4 million people who were facing final deportation orders at the end of last year.
The campaign to encourage folks to voluntarily depart has also been ineffective; according to the statistics, just little over 10,000 immigrants have done so.
The government’s public relations campaign has escalated as protests against increased ICE activity have erupted in many cities.
ICE shared a video on its official X account on Tuesday showing its agents detaining individuals in Los Angeles. The video was captioned, “We are on a mission in Los Angeles! Legally. Ethically. Morally.”
Mr. Trump told troops he would “liberate Los Angeles” during a speech in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, where he depicted what he called chaos in the streets.
The Homeland Security Department published a video the next day that included protest footage and the message “RESTORE LAW AND ORDER NOW!”
On Saturday, when the government intends to deploy tanks and artillery systems onto the streets of Washington for the 250th birthday celebration of the U.S. Army, Mr. Trump will have more visual material. Mr. Trump has warned that “very big force” will be used against any demonstrators who gather during the military parade.