What had trump said about hispanics in 2025

Checked on December 11, 2025
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Executive summary

In 2025 President Trump repeatedly framed immigration in sharply negative terms, saying the U.S. should not admit people from “hellholes” or “filthy” countries and pushing policies his critics say target Hispanic communities; multiple news outlets quote him using those phrases [1] [2]. Polling and advocacy groups report broad Hispanic disapproval of his second-term policies — Pew finds about 78% say his policies harm their group and Hispanic dissatisfaction is high [3] [4].

1. Trump’s 2025 rhetoric: “hellholes” and “filthy” countries — direct quotes reported

News coverage in December 2025 records Trump using demeaning language about immigrants’ countries of origin, with NPR reporting he objected to taking immigrants from “hellholes like Afghanistan, Haiti, Somalia and many other countries” and other outlets citing similar formulations [1]. The Guardian and other outlets characterize his remarks and related administration commentary as racialized and inflammatory [2].

2. How reporters framed the remarks: broader context of second-term immigration push

Press coverage pairs Trump’s comments with a string of hardline policy moves in his second term — from executive actions like a birthright-citizenship order (challenged in courts) to a national security strategy focused on immigration and regional posture — prompting coverage that links rhetoric to concrete policy change [5] [6] [7]. Reuters and Brookings pieces examine these policy maneuvers alongside his rhetoric [8] [7].

3. Hispanic public reaction: large majorities say his policies harm their community

Survey research in late 2025 shows widespread Hispanic concern and disapproval. Pew’s October 2025 National Survey of Latinos reports roughly 78% of Hispanics say Trump’s policies harm their group and that majorities are dissatisfied with the country’s direction under his administration [3] [4]. AP and other outlets summarize similar polling trends [9].

4. Political split within the Hispanic electorate

Sources stress heterogeneity: while most Hispanics disapprove of Trump’s policies, some segments and regions shifted toward him in 2024 and polls show varying attitudes by prior vote and local context [4] [10] [11]. Analysts at AEI and polling firms highlight that Latino voters are not monolithic and that Trump’s coalition drew support from diverse motives [11] [10].

5. Advocacy and community response: condemnation and legal alarms

Hispanic organizations publicly condemned early executive orders and called out threats to constitutional rights such as birthright citizenship; the Hispanic Federation issued an immediate statement calling those moves “alarming” and unlawful [6]. Civil-society groups and Latino advocacy organizations also characterized public remarks and adjunct rally rhetoric as demeaning and dangerous [12].

6. Administrative moves affecting Hispanic identity and data

The administration signaled potential rollbacks or revisions to federal racial and ethnic data standards — including how “Hispanic or Latino” checkboxes are used — prompting coverage about political motives behind census-question and category changes [13]. Reporting links these technical decisions to broader political aims articulated in conservative policy plans [13].

7. Two competing narratives in the sources

Mainstream news coverage emphasizes the inflammatory language and the harms perceived by Hispanic communities [1] [2]. At the same time, policy analysts and some conservative outlets frame the measures as security or sovereignty priorities and point to electoral gains among some Latino voters as evidence of political resonance [8] [11]. Both strands appear across the provided reporting [4] [10].

8. Limits of the available reporting

Available sources document Trump’s 2025 remarks about immigrants and summarize Hispanic public opinion and organizational responses, but they do not provide a comprehensive catalog of every public statement he made about Hispanics that year; detailed transcripts of all speeches or a complete timeline of remarks are not included in the sourced material (not found in current reporting). Sources also vary in tone and framing, so attribution matters when weighing claims [1] [2] [4].

Conclusion: The documented 2025 record shows Trump using starkly negative language about immigrants’ countries of origin and pursuing second-term policies that many Hispanic adults view as harmful; reporting and polling agree on high levels of Hispanic disapproval while also noting political complexity within the Hispanic electorate [1] [3] [4].

Want to dive deeper?
What did Donald Trump say about Hispanic voters during his 2024-2025 campaign events?
Did Trump make specific policy promises affecting Hispanic communities in 2025?
How did Hispanic advocacy groups respond to Trump's 2025 statements?
Were there notable media fact-checks of Trump's remarks about Hispanics in 2025?
Did Trump's 2025 comments about Hispanics affect his support among Latino voters in polls?