ldrews, on 2017-August-07, 15:49, said:
I have seen this here twice now and am surprised that noone else has pointed out that it is simply wrong. By most accounts there are about 11 million illegal immigrants in America, a figure that has been more or less static since the end of the depression. From everything I have seen, there are still around 11 million illegal immigrants. How is this possible if illegal entries are down 70%?
Well the answer is of course that they are not. Whenever a politician gives you a figure of this nature you should demand to see the source data. It turns out that in this case Trump is using only the data from the south western border with Mexico and not any sort of representation of illegal immigration as a whole. Moreover, he uses as his base statistic a period containing a massive spike, probably caused in part by the election, specifically his own rhetoric during the campaign.
Now there has certainly been a reduction in attempted border crossings in this region. That is part of a long-term trend of declining numbers since 2000 and it is at the moment unclear whether the cause of the most recent changes is Trump rhetoric or if this is the calm after the end of 2016 rush. The figures for July (a 15% rise) suggest it might be the latter but it is currently too early to say. What almost all experts do agree on is that the changes have little, if anything, to do with White House policies. Finally, the biggest effect (outside of the US economy going through the floor) is most likely to come in the form of the violence in the Northern Triangle. If the numbers of refugees picks back up to the levels seen in the past then attempted border crossings will likely rise again irrespective of anything that might be done on the US side of the fence/wall.