By Laura Onyeneho |ย Houston Defender | Word In Black

Thisย postย was originally published onย Defender Network

Burgers and fries from Trump Burger
President Donald Trumpโ€™s immigration policies donโ€™t care how loyal you are and Roland Mehrez Beainy is finding that out the hard way.ย Credit:ย Trump Burger via Instagram

(WIB) โ€“ President Donald Trumpโ€™s immigration policies donโ€™t care how loyal you are and Roland Mehrez Beainy is finding that out the hard way.ย 

The Lebanese immigrant who built a mini restaurant empire glorifying the president is now facing deportation under the very system he celebrated.

Beainyโ€™s chain, Trump Burger, is a shrine to MAGA red. Menu items read like campaign slogans and merchandise shouts loyalty to the man Beainy credits with โ€œsaving the economyโ€ during his first term.ย 

The first location opened in Bellville in 2020 and since then, the brand has expanded to Kemah, Houston and Flatonia. For critics, itโ€™s a shrine to a president whose policies have harmed many of the very people who make up Americaโ€™s immigrant communities.

Reports state that โ€‹โ€‹Roland Mehrez Beainy, 28, entered the US as โ€œa non-immigrant visitorโ€ from Lebanon in 2019 and was supposed to have left the country by 12 February 2024. Credit: Trump Burger USA/via Instagram

Now, Beainy has become one of those people.

According to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Beainy entered the U.S. in 2019 as a non-immigrant visitor and was required to leave by February 12, 2024. He applied for legal status through marriage, but the Department of Homeland Security claims thereโ€™s no proof he ever lived with his alleged spouse, a key requirement for that path to citizenship. On May 16, ICE arrested him and placed him in deportation proceedings.

The man who built his business around Trumpโ€™s image is now caught in the gears of an immigration enforcement machine that Trump himself worked hard to strengthen. Under his administration, immigration restrictions tightened, deportations increased and legal pathways narrowed. None of those policies asked for your political affiliation before applying the rules.

In the political fantasy, Trump is a patriotic savior, standing up for โ€œhardworking Americansโ€ and cracking down only on โ€œbadโ€ immigrants, the kind described in rally soundbites and conservative-leaning news segments. In legal reality, the immigration system is vast, bureaucratic and indiscriminate. It doesnโ€™t care if you have the former presidentโ€™s face printed on your to-go cups. It doesnโ€™t care if youโ€™ve dedicated your livelihood to singing his praises. If youโ€™re out of status, the law says you go.

Beainyโ€™s case should be a wake-up call to anyone who believes political allegiance offers protection from policy. Immigration law doesnโ€™t work like a country club where connections get you past the velvet rope. Itโ€™s a code enforced by agencies that answer to the letter of the law, not to campaign loyalty.

Itโ€™s easy to get swept up in the branding of politics, to mistake slogans for substance, to believe that wrapping yourself in a movementโ€™s colors will shield you from its downsides. Beainy turned Trumpism into a menu and, in doing so, sold the illusion that politics is something you can consume without consequences. But real life doesnโ€™t work like a marketing campaign.

Immigration law is the product of decades of political posturing from both parties, where being โ€œtoughโ€ on immigration plays better in soundbites than explaining the nuance of visa overstays, asylum claims and green card backlogs. In that environment, individual stories get reduced to paperwork, deadlines and technicalities, the kind Beainy now faces.

Thereโ€™s also a broader lesson here about the dangers of simplifying politics into merchandisable identity. Buying a meal became a way to โ€œvoteโ€ daily for an ideology. However, politics that operate purely as branding are fragile shields. They canโ€™t protect you from the hard edges of the system you help promote.

Beainyโ€™s fate will be decided not by the number of customers heโ€™s served or the size of his MAGA merch display but by an immigration judge who examines the facts.ย