Home list prices fell in 14 of the 20 largest immigrant‑population metros in December 2025

Tech Error

Verification couldn’t be completed due to a technical issue accessing sources. A retry is needed. Learn more in Methodology.

Interesting: 0/0 • Support: 0/0Log in to vote

other

Realtor.com or comparable housing market data confirm year‑over‑year declines in home list prices for 14 of the top 20 metro areas in December 2025.

Source summary
The White House article credits President Trump’s 2025 mass deportation and immigration-enforcement actions with improving housing affordability, raising wages in some blue-collar industries, increasing native-born employment, and reducing several categories of violent crime. It cites specific statistics and selected city-level examples (Washington, D.C.; Chicago; Memphis; New Orleans) to argue these outcomes are the result of the administration’s policies. The piece frames these changes as delivering on an "America First" agenda and criticizes Democrats who, it says, oppose the measures.
Latest fact check

I was unable to fully verify the claim because the critical Pew Research Center table listing the 20 U.S. metro areas with the largest unauthorized immigrant populations for 2016 is embedded as an interactive chart that does not render in the retrieved page text, and no alternative authoritative text or PDF copy of the complete top‑20 list was accessible via the available tools. This prevents a definitive match between Pew’s top‑20 metros and the Realtor.com December 2025 metro‑level price data needed to count how many of those specific metros had year‑over‑year list‑price declines. Due to this technical limitation in accessing the underlying Pew ranking, I cannot determine with confidence whether exactly 14 of those 20 metros saw list‑price declines in December 2025.

Verdict: Tech Error, because the key source table is not machine‑readable or fully accessible through the tools, blocking a reliable comparison of the specified metro list to the December 2025 housing data.

0 seconds

Timeline

  1. Scheduled follow-up · Feb 01, 2026overdue
  2. Completion due · Feb 01, 2026
  3. Update · Jan 15, 2026, 05:22 AMTech Error
    I was unable to fully verify the claim because the critical Pew Research Center table listing the 20 U.S. metro areas with the largest unauthorized immigrant populations for 2016 is embedded as an interactive chart that does not render in the retrieved page text, and no alternative authoritative text or PDF copy of the complete top‑20 list was accessible via the available tools. This prevents a definitive match between Pew’s top‑20 metros and the Realtor.com December 2025 metro‑level price data needed to count how many of those specific metros had year‑over‑year list‑price declines. Due to this technical limitation in accessing the underlying Pew ranking, I cannot determine with confidence whether exactly 14 of those 20 metros saw list‑price declines in December 2025. Verdict: Tech Error, because the key source table is not machine‑readable or fully accessible through the tools, blocking a reliable comparison of the specified metro list to the December 2025 housing data.
  4. Original article · Jan 14, 2026

Comments

Only logged-in users can comment.
Loading…