
Based on the European Union’s latest move, it appears the 27-member-state bloc is finally starting to heed President Donald Trump’s wisdom.
While speaking at the United Nations’ General Assembly last year, the president warned that the E.U.’s lax immigration policies were destroying it.
“You’re destroying your countries,” he said. “Europe is in serious trouble; they’ve been invaded by a force of illegal aliens like nobody’s ever seen before.”
President Trump lit their asses up
We have Reasserted that America Belongs to the American People, and tells all of them, YOU’RE DESTROYING YOUR COUNTRIES
Europe is in serious trouble, and the vast majority of criminals in prisons are migrant invaders, and London wants to… pic.twitter.com/hcmSMtyPiJ
— Whiplash347 (@Whiplash437) September 23, 2025
Months later, the E.U. “has moved forward with a vast overhaul of its migration policy, aiming to ramp up deportations and ink controversial deals to build detention centers abroad,” according to the Associated Press.
The policies are so controversial in leftist Europe that critics have compared them to President Trump’s own policies for the U.S.
“Across the Atlantic, we see the violence and fear created by ICE’s brutal immigration enforcement,” Platform for International Cooperation on Undocumented Migrants spokesperson Silvia Carter whined to the AP.
“Europe should be learning from the harms of that model, not building its own version of it,” she further insisted.
If anything, this version might be even better.
“Law enforcement officers across the bloc no longer need warrants from judges to raid private residences or public institutions like hospitals” when searching for illegal aliens, according to the AP.
The European Union has agreed on sweeping new deportation measures that would expand detention powers, allow home searches and create migrant return centres outside the bloc. Supporters say the reforms are needed to improve deportation rates, while critics warn they resemble the… pic.twitter.com/ZlwQIs3nx9
— TRT World (@trtworld) June 4, 2026
Mélissa Camara, a lawmaker from France’s weenie Green Party, also kvetched about the deal, calling it “a historic setback” for human rights.
“The legalization of return hubs outside the European Union, the green light for the detention of minors, home visits inspired by ICE practices: the legal arsenal serving a xenophobic ideology is now complete,” she complained.
Trump isn’t the only American who’s chided Europe’s prior policies. Commenting on social media about the recent murder of white British man Henry Nowak at the hands of a migrant, Vice President JD Vance wrote that Nowak’s murder was “as tragic as it is enraging.”
“He should still be alive today, and he would be if the last few generations of European elites had stood their ground against the politics of self-hatred and the mass invasion of migrants, many of whom despise the West and the people who love it,” he added.
Henry Nowak died the same way a civilization dies: abandoned, handcuffed by authorities who neither trusted nor cared for him, and accused of hate crimes he did not commit. His murder is as tragic as it is enraging. He should still be alive today, and he would be if the last few… https://t.co/e3HkjzWzwU
— JD Vance (@JDVance) June 5, 2026
War Secretary Pete Hegseth also referenced all this during his D-Day commemoration speech in France over the weekend.
“Sadly, today, different European beaches are stormed by different dangerous ideologies,” he said. “Beaches in Spain and Italy and Greece and Bulgaria, boats and men arrive. When will European capitals do something about that invasion? Or is it too late? I pray not, and I believe not.”
Spain is one lone E.U. country that’s bucked the trend by recently legalizing half a million illegal aliens.
“Spain’s government has approved plans to give legal status to 500,000 undocumented migrants, allowing them to be integrated formally into the workforce,” the BBC reported in April.
– Long lines formed outside consulates across Spain on April 16, 2026, as undocumented migrants rushed to gather required documents for the country’s new extraordinary regularization program.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez’s government finalized the measure on April… pic.twitter.com/lbQLHqbmHY
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The Informant (@theinformant_x) April 16, 2026
Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, a socialist, described the decision as “an act of justice” and a necessity.




– Long lines formed outside consulates across Spain on April 16, 2026, as undocumented migrants rushed to gather required documents for the country’s new extraordinary regularization program.
The Informant (@theinformant_x)