Congressman Joaquin Castro (D-TX) isn't buying the Trump administration's apparent change in tone on immigration, and he's making sure people know it.
Axios reported that White House Deputy Chief of Staff James Blair privately urged House Republicans to stop using the phrase "mass deportations" and redirect their messaging toward removing “violent criminals.” Castro pushed back on what he called a political smokescreen.
"Make no mistake, the Trump administration has not changed," Rep. Castro wrote on X. "They want their cruel mass deportation campaign out of the headlines while ICE continues to target our communities."
Castro's response came as Blair delivered the messaging guidance during a closed-door session at the House Republican retreat in Doral, Florida.
According to sources familiar with the meeting, Blair encouraged members to highlight the removal of dangerous offenders rather than defend the broader deportation effort, a notable pivot from the party's previous immigration stance, which defined the party's 2024 campaign.
Castro's Pushback
For Castro, the rebranding effort changes nothing on the ground. He pointed to real people caught up in enforcement actions as evidence that the administration's priorities haven't shifted, only its talking points have.
He cited students talented enough to perform at the U.S. Capitol and Carnegie Hall, long-standing community members with decades of roots in America, and individuals held in remote detention facilities as examples of who is actually being targeted.
"Americans don’t want to see people who have contributed to communities for decades deported," he wrote. "Keep speaking out—your voices are making a difference."
This comes as a POLITICO poll conducted in January found that nearly half of Americans believe the administration's deportation campaign has gone too far, including roughly one in five people who voted for Trump in 2024.
Reports of U.S. citizens being detained and two American citizens killed in Minneapolis this year have further complicated the administration's public standing on the issue.
Castro's message to supporters was direct: the campaign isn't softening, and neither should the opposition to it.

