A new AP-NORC/AAPI Data poll reports that many Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) adults say they have experienced or witnessed disruptions in daily life connected to the Trump administration’s immigration policies. Multiple outlets describe the findings as widespread and not limited to a single group within the AAPI community. The poll indicates that roughly half of Asian American respondents report that the immigration crackdown has changed their day-to-day routines in some way, while additional respondents say they have observed upheaval affecting others. The articles present the results as evidence that heightened enforcement and related policy actions are having real-world effects beyond the immediate immigration system, influencing household routines and community experiences. All three sources frame the poll as a measure of perceived impact—drawing on survey responses from AAPI adults—rather than reporting specific policy changes in detail. Overall, the reporting converges on the same takeaway: a majority of AAPI adults in the survey report some form of disruption, whether personal or witnessed, linked to the administration’s immigration crackdown.