Mexico’s president hits back at US anti-immigration ads, calls them ‘discriminatory propaganda’
- The Trump administration's anti-immigration TV spot aired on Mexican television over the weekend.
- The U.S. Government paid for the one-minute message, which prompted condemnation.
- Kristi Noem, the Homeland Security Secretary, delivered a warning from President Trump in the ad.
- Secretary Noem stated in the ad, translated into Spanish, "If you are here illegally, you're next."
- President Sheinbaum plans to send a bill to Congress banning similar discriminatory commercials from foreign governments.
103 Articles
103 Articles
The US Has Spent Over $500,000 on Hyper-Targeted YouTube Ads to Discourage Irregular Migration
A WIRED investigation reveals that the US Department of Homeland Security has deployed at least 30 YouTube ads since April 1 to threaten irregular migrants with deportation and a ban on reentry.
Mexico’s president hits back at US anti-immigration ads, calls them ‘discriminatory propaganda’
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum says her government plans to ban advertisements from the US Department of Homeland Security, which have broadcast across the country in recent weeks and show Secretary Kristi Noem warning migrants not to enter the United States illegally.
In Mexico, US-produced anti-migrant advertising is controversial
For weeks, a television spot produced by the White House has been on the big Mexican television channels and has been controversial. This American advertising campaign stigmatizes migrants and provokes the Mexican government, which wants to put an end to them.
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