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    Home » Trump considers to travel ban several countries
    Immigration

    Trump considers to travel ban several countries

    Laiz RodriguesBy Laiz Rodrigues15 de March de 2025Updated:15 de March de 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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    U.S. President Donald Trump reacts as he meets NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte (not pictured), in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., March 13, 2025. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo
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    From a conservative perspective, the Trump administration’s consideration of a travel ban on several countries—reportedly up to 41, according to a March 15, 2025, Reuters memo—can be viewed as a logical extension of a national security-first approach that prioritizes American sovereignty and safety.

    Conservatives often emphasize the government’s primary responsibility to protect its citizens, and this policy aligns with that principle by targeting nations deemed to have inadequate vetting or screening processes, which could pose risks of terrorism or other threats. The move echoes Trump’s first-term travel ban, which focused on seven majority-Muslim nations and was ultimately upheld by the Supreme Court in 2018, reinforcing the legal precedent that the executive branch has broad authority over immigration for national security purposes.

    The proposed ban’s structure—dividing countries into three tiers, with full visa suspensions for 10 (like Afghanistan, Iran, and Syria), partial suspensions for five (like Haiti and Myanmar), and conditional restrictions for 26 (like Pakistan and Belarus)—demonstrates a tailored strategy rather than a blanket policy.

     

    A conservative might argue this reflects a pragmatic assessment of each country’s specific risks, such as poor cooperation with U.S. officials, weak passport security, or documented ties to extremism. For example, Afghanistan’s inclusion could be justified by its ongoing instability under Taliban rule and the presence of ISIS-K, while Iran’s long-standing designation as a state sponsor of terrorism fits the pattern of excluding nations hostile to U.S. interests. The inclusion of non-Muslim-majority countries like Cuba and North Korea further supports the argument that this isn’t about religious bias, as critics might claim, but about tangible security concerns—a point conservatives often stressed during debates over the original ban.

    Economically, this as a way to reduce strain on public resources by limiting immigration from unstable regions, aligning with a broader “America First” ethos.

    Trump’s January 20, 2025, executive order mandating intensified vetting by March 21 reflects a proactive stance, appealing to conservatives who favor decisive action over what they might call the Biden administration’s softer approach, which repealed the earlier ban in 2021. Critics on the left might decry this as discriminatory or isolationist, but a conservative rebuttal could point to the Supreme Court’s validation of Trump’s authority and argue that national security trumps international optics or feelings.

    On the flip side, some conservatives—particularly libertarians—might question the ban’s scope, arguing that targeting 41 countries could overreach, entangling the U.S. in unnecessary diplomatic friction with allies or trade partners. The conditional tier, requiring countries to fix “deficiencies” within 60 days, might also be seen as bureaucratic heavy-handedness, though others would counter that it incentivizes global accountability.

    Overall,, this policy reinforces border control as a cornerstone of governance, prioritizing citizen safety over open-door idealism, even if it invites controversy.

    Research: Reuters, AI, @Grok3,

    ‘photo by Reuters

    Featured Immigration Travel ban Trump USA
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