Democrats have hit out at President Donald Trump’s new travel ban, accusing the president of “bigotry” and labelling the restrictions on travel to the U.S. from 19 countries a “racist” and “discriminatory” policy.
Announcing the policy on Truth Social, Trump declared: “We don’t want them”.
Under the new policy, travel will be fully restricted from 12 nations from 9 June: Afghanistan, Burma, Chad, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen.
Partial restrictions will apply to seven others: Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela.
Democrats said the policy was reminiscent of the deeply controversial “Muslim travel ban” he introduced during his first term.
Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar slammed the “discriminatory policy” as “beyond shameful” on social media, while Senator Adam Schiff said: “Bigotry is not a national security strategy”.
Lawful permanent residents, athletes traveling for the World Cup and Olympics and those who have already been granted asylum or refugee status are among the limited exceptions to the restrictions.
Others with immediate family member visas, dual citizenship with a non-restricted passport and United Nations and Nato visas are also exempt.
ICE made record number of arrests this week
Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers made the largest number of arrests in a single day on Tuesday this week, detaining more than 2,200 people according to reports.
Some of those arrested were detained after being asked to attend their scheduled ICE check-ins early, immigration lawyers told NBC News.
Three separate sources told the news outlet that hundreds of the people who were arrested had been in ICE’s Alternative to Detention program.

In that program, undocumented migrants who are not deemed a public safety threat are released but monitored through periodic check-ins, smartphone apps and ankle monitors.
Veronica Navarrete, who was waiting for a friend outside an immigration office on Wednesday, told NBC that immigrants had no options here.
“If you enter, there’s a possibility that they’ll take you into custody,” she said. “And if you don’t enter, you’ve missed your appointment, and that’s automatic deportation. We have no way out.”
Rachel Clun5 June 2025 12:43
Democrats hit out at ‘racist’ and ‘discriminatory’ travel ban
Democrats have spoken out against the travel ban announced by President Donald Trump, criticising it as a “racist policy”.
Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar slammed the “discriminatory policy” as “beyond shameful” on social media.
“Just like his first Muslim Ban, this latest announcement flies in the face of basic morality and goes directly against our values,” she said on social media. “This racist policy will not make us safe, it will separate families and endanger lives. We cannot let it stand.”

New York Rep. Nydia Velazquez echoed Omar’s comments, adding Americans must “defend what’s right”.
“Trump’s new travel ban has nothing to do with safety & everything to do with shutting people out & isolating the US,” she wrote on X. “Just like in 2017, it’s discriminatory & wrong.”
Rachel Clun5 June 2025 12:27
Travel ban ‘flies in the face of US values’, says congresswoman
Trump’s travel ban will only “isolate” the U.S. on the world stage and “flies in the face of what our country is supposed to stand for”, a democratic congresswoman has said.
Pramila Jayapal, who represents most of Seattle, said the policy “not only lays the blame in the wrong place, it creates a dangerous precedent”.
Banning people fleeing from dangerous countries such as Afghanistan, the Congo, Haiti and Sudan will “only further destabilize global security”, she added.
“Trump is indiscriminately taking a chainsaw to our government – destroying federal agencies that keep us safe, indiscriminately cutting jobs, and hindering our progress across research fields.”
Alex Croft5 June 2025 12:15
Trump hints that Egypt could be next on the travel ban list
In the wake of the Colorado terror attack, in which an Egyptian national who had overstayed his visa allegedly set fire to pro-Israel demonstrators, Donald Trump has suggested Egypt could be next on the travel ban list.
On Tuesday, the Department of Homeland Security announced that ICE agents had taken the wife and children of Mohamed Sabry Soliman into custody. This came after police in Boulder, Colorado arrested Soliman for allegedly throwing molotov cocktails at a peaceful demonstration for Israeli hostages on Sunday.
Trump warned during the Truth Social address that he directed his top national security chiefs to investigate whether Egypt should be added to the list.
“In light of recent events, the Secretary of State, in consultation with the Attorney General, the Secretary of Homeland Security, and the Director of National Intelligence, shall provide me an update to the review of the practices and procedures of Egypt to confirm the adequacy of its current screening and vetting capabilities,” Trump said.
Alex Croft5 June 2025 12:01
Senator accuses Trump of ‘bigotry’ following travel ban
Democratic Senator Adam Schiff has hit out at Donald Trump’s travel ban for what he describes as a bigoted national security police.
“This is Trump’s reckless first term travel ban all over again,” Schiff wrote on X.
“Just like before, Trump’s expanded ban on travelers from around the world will not improve our national security and will only further isolate the U.S. from the rest of world. Bigotry is not a national security strategy,” he added.
Alex Croft5 June 2025 11:49
Reminder: Trump’s ‘Muslim ban’ during first administration
The travel ban imposed by Donald Trump is recalls the previous ‘Muslim ban’ which the U.S. president brought into place during his first administration.
Executive Order 13769, the first such ban, was signed just days after Trump took power in January 2017, and placed a 90-day ban on travel for people from seven majority-Muslim countries.
These included Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen. The first bans lasted for 90 days and were repeatedly challenged in the courts.
The administration also placed a reverse travel ban on North Korea, preventing U.S. citizens from visiting the country.
The bans were all revoked in a proclamation by Joe Biden immediately after assuming the presidency in 2021.

Alex Croft5 June 2025 11:39
Oxfam: Travel ban is ‘chilling return of policies of fear’
We’ve got some more reaction in to Donald Trump’s travel ban, which has sparked outrage among rights organisations worldwide.
Oxfam has described the ban as a “chilling return to policies of fear, discrimination, and division” and accuse Trump of targeting Muslim-majority countries and other nations with Black and brown populations.
The policy “deepens inequality and perpetuates harmful stereotypes, racist tropes, and religious intolerance”, Oxfam said, adding that it is not about national security but “sowing division and vilifying communities that are seeking safety and opportunity in the United States”.
Oxfam added: “This latest travel ban would deny entry to individuals and families fleeing war, persecution, and oppression, forcing them to remain in dangerous conditions. It will prevent family reunifications and America’s historical legacy as a welcoming nation will be further eroded.”
Alex Croft5 June 2025 11:26
Trump administration asks Serbia to take deportees – report
Donald Trump’s administration is pushing Serbia and other Balkan countries to take in the migrants deported from the U.S., Bloomberg News reported on Thursday.
How they responded is unclear – as is which migrants the US would deport to the Balkan countries.
Alex Croft5 June 2025 11:10
‘We don’t want them’: Trump’s comments as he announced ban
Here are more of Donald Trump’s comments as he announced a controversial travel ban in a video on his Truth Social platform.
The recent attack in Boulder, Colorado, in which 12 people were injured after a man attacked a group gathering in support of Israeli hostages, “underscored the extreme dangers posed to our country by the entry of foreign nationals who are not properly vetted as well as those who come here as temporary visitors and overstay their visas”, Trump said.
“We don’t want them,” he added, because the US can’t have “open migration from any country where we cannot safely and reliably vet and screen those who seek to enter”.
The strength of the restrictions are based on the “severity of the threat posed”, he added.

Alex Croft5 June 2025 10:54
Trump’s travel ban exempts athletes
Donald Trump’s new travel ban contains a exemption for athletes.
The exemption could apply to to players, staff or families with clubs participating in the 2025 Club World Cup, 2026 Fifa World Cup or the 2028 Olympics.
The countries affected by the latest travel ban are Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen.
The entry of people from seven other countries: Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela, will be partially restricted.
However, in Section 4 of the executive order, an exemption states: “any athlete or member of an athletic team, including coaches, persons performing a necessary support role, and immediate relatives, traveling for the World Cup, Olympics, or other major sporting event as determined by the Secretary of State”.
Jabed Ahmed5 June 2025 10:38