What will be the Colombian public opinion on accepting deported migrants by May 31, 2025?
Majority support • 25%
Majority oppose • 25%
Evenly split • 25%
No clear data • 25%
Public opinion polls, news reports
Colombia Agrees to Accept Deported Migrants on U.S. Military Aircraft After Trump's 25% to 50% Tariff Threats
Jan 27, 2025, 03:49 AM
The White House announced that Colombia has agreed to all of President Donald Trump's terms regarding the deportation of migrants. This agreement includes the unrestricted acceptance of all illegal aliens from Colombia returned from the United States, including on U.S. military aircraft, without limitation or delay. The decision came after Trump threatened 25% tariffs, which would rise to 50% after one week, and other sanctions on Colombia, following the country's initial refusal to accept deportation flights. The Colombian government, led by President Gustavo Petro, has arranged for the presidential plane to facilitate the return of these migrants, ensuring their dignified treatment. The tariff orders will be held in reserve unless Colombia fails to honor the agreement, while visa sanctions and enhanced customs inspections will remain in place until the first group of deportees is returned.
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Neutral stance • 25%
Oppose Petro's stance • 25%
Support Petro's stance • 25%
No significant opinion • 25%
Insufficient data to determine • 25%
Public opinion is evenly split • 25%
Majority support the agreement • 25%
Majority oppose the agreement • 25%
Policy becomes more lenient • 25%
Other changes • 25%
Policy remains unchanged • 25%
Policy becomes stricter • 25%
Switch to commercial flights • 25%
Agreement with U.S. for joint operations • 25%
Other • 25%
Continued use of presidential plane • 25%
Increased protests • 25%
No significant change • 25%
Other response • 25%
Increased support • 25%
Full compliance • 25%
Agreement renegotiated • 25%
Non-compliance • 25%
Partial compliance • 25%
Legal actions against US • 25%
Increased diplomatic efforts • 25%
Other responses • 25%
Continued rejection of flights • 25%
Agreement honored without issues • 25%
Agreement terminated • 25%
Major disputes lead to sanctions • 25%
Minor disputes resolved • 25%
Military flights accepted • 25%
Protocol established • 25%
No resolution • 25%
Civilian flights only • 25%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%