Story highlights
Donald Trump's wife, Melania, is Slovenian born
His first wife, Ivana, was born in Czechoslovakia
Itâs more than a little ironic that a guy as hardline on immigration as Donald Trump has been surrounded by immigrants his entire life, starting from the very beginning.
âMy mother was born in Scotland, in the Hebrides, in Stornoway, so thatâs serious Scotland. And she was a great woman,â Trump said in a 2010 documentary. âWhenever anything was on about, ceremonial about the Queen she could sit at the television and just watch it. She had great respect for the Queen and for everything (she) representsâ
In 1930, an 18-year-old Mary MacLeod sailed for America from Glasgow on the S.S. Transylvania, according to a copy of the shipâs passenger list on Ancestry.com. MacLeod arrived in New York and married Fred Trump, the son of German immigrants himself.
âMy grandfather Frederick Trump came to the United States in 1885. He joined the great gold rush and instead of gold he decided to open up some hotels in Alaska. He did fantastically well. He loved this country, likewise my father and now me,â Trump said in a taped message for a German-American pride parade a few years ago.
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But on the campaign trail, Trump sounds more like a nativist than the son and grandson of immigrants.
Trump told a meeting of conservative activists last year that the nationâs 11 million undocumented immigrants would never vote Republican.
âYouâd better be smart and youâd better be tough,â Trump said. âTheyâre taking your jobs, and youâd better be careful.â
Itâs tough rhetoric that comes with a twist. Trumpâs current wife is an immigrant herself.
Melania Trump moved to New York about 20 years ago. The Slovenian born model now has her own jewelry and caviar-cream skincare lines. She married Trump in 2005 in a fairytale wedding that included a wedding gown reported to cost $100,000. And the next year, she became a citizen â a decade after arriving in America.
âShe went through a long process to become a citizen. It was very tough,â Trump told CNN recently, adding that Melania agrees with his immigration position. âWhen she got it, she was very proud of it. She came from Europe, and she was very, very proud of it. And she thinks itâs a beautiful process when it works.â
And of course, Trumpâs first wife, Ivana, was an immigrant too. Born in Czechoslovakia, she married an Austrian ski instructor in order to get a foreign passport to leave the communist country, her divorce lawyer has said.
A few years later, she âwent to my aunt and uncle in Canada,â she has said.
She and Trump married in 1977, but she didnât become an American citizen for another 11 years.
Donald Trump's rise
Trump has said he supports legal immigration, but on the stump he seems to show little interest in the dreams of modern day immigrants. His immigration plan calls for foreign workers abroad to take a back seat to the domestically unemployed.
âYou have a border, you have a country, and if you donât have a border what are we?â Trump asked before answering himself. âJust a â just a nothing. A nothing.â
Trump hasnât been shy about celebrating his immigrant roots. He served as the grand marshal of the annual German-American Steuben Parade in New York City. And heâs reminisced about that day and how far his family had come from its European heritage.
Remembering the 1999 parade, Trump said, âWe passed Trump Towers, 69 stories. I looked up and I said, âThis is a long way from Kallstadt,ââ referring to the town in Germany where his grandfather was from.
But on the campaign trail, Trump is singing a very different immigrant song.
âWeâre building a wall. Itâs going to be a wall that is not â nobodyâs going through my wall,â Trump has said. âTrump builds walls. I build walls.â
Curt Devine and Ben Krolowitz contributed to this report.