Nicki Minaj Ex-Fans Create Petition For Deportation
As angry as many onlookers and even the Barbz may appear to be. Nicki Minaj cannot be “deported” because she is a U.S. citizen. Deportation only applies to non-citizens. Many longtime fans — especially in communities like LGBTQ+ supporters and younger pop audiences — expressed disappointment, shock, or anger at her embrace of conservative figures after years of more neutral or different political stances earlier in her career. While on stage with Erika Kirk, Minaj called Donald Trump “handsome,” a “good role model,” and said she has “respect and admiration” for him and Vice President JD Vance — language that surprised many given her previous public commentary.
Once someone is a citizen, a petition—online or otherwise—cannot revoke citizenship or force deportation.bOnline petitions have no legal power. Anyone can create a petition on sites like Change.org.
These petitions do not trigger immigration action, court cases, or government enforcement.
They’re usually symbolic, political, or meant to stir attention. Even criminal convictions don’t work that way
A citizen cannot be deported for controversial speech, behavior, or legal trouble. Only in extreme cases involving fraud during naturalization can citizenship be challenged—and that requires courts, not petitions.
Her willingness to publicly engage in political discourse — particularly at a pointedly conservative event — has made her a lightning rod for debate about celebrity influence in politics. But, that doesn't mean she will be deported due to her somewhat convenient change in support. Many are speculating much of this may have to do with her husband’s legal whoas. With that being said.
“Petition to deport” headlines are clickbait, not legal reality. There may be a petition, but it has zero legal effect, and Nicki Minaj cannot be deported from the U.S. based on it.
