WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump 's second term began with efforts to deliver on key campaign promises, including his vows to crack down on immigration and restore '' energy dominance.''
In his first Oval Office appearance in his second term, he issued sweeping pardons for people charged in the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol and declared a ''national emergency'' at the U.S.-Mexico border.
Some of these early moves are likely to be popular with the public. Most Americans think increasing security at the U.S.-Mexico border should be at least ''a moderate priority'' for the federal government, according to a poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, and about half think it should be a high priority.
But some of his other pledges — pulling out of the Paris climate agreement, increasing oil drilling on federal lands and ending birthright citizenship — are less widely favored. The poll found that pardoning most people who participated in 2021 riot is particularly unpopular.
Here's what Americans think about some of the major actions that Trump has promised.
US adults are split on mass deportations, but most support deporting immigrants convicted of violent crime
Executive orders previewed Monday by an incoming White House official are intended to end asylum access, send troops to the U.S.-Mexico border and end birthright citizenship.
The January poll found that targeted deportations of immigrants who have been convicted of a crime would be popular, even if they involved immigrants who are in the country legally, but that support doesn't extend to mass deportations.