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We Got This Covered
We Got This Covered
Jaymie Vaz

Since things are changing anyway, senior Trump official heavily encourages a immigration pivot

The White House’s deputy chief of staff, James Blair, recently urged Republican lawmakers to shift their focus on immigration enforcement, moving away from a mass deportation agenda toward targeting criminals instead.

With the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) getting new leadership, there’s a real chance to either totally reset President Trump’s immigration strategy or just double down on his original campaign promise for the biggest deportation operation ever.

House Speaker Mike Johnson confirmed that the current aggressive operations have caused a “hiccup” for the party. Here’s the kicker, however: despite all this talk of a pivot, per AP News, Trump’s mass deportation efforts don’t seem to be slowing down at all. 

In fact, they seem to be ramping up, with billions of dollars being poured into hiring more Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers. The government is also hiring new contractors to build massive warehouse detention sites on insane timelines. The administration is still aiming to round up and remove about 1 million immigrants from the U.S. this year.

If his party no longer agrees with his goals, you have to wonder why they aren’t stopping him

White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson made it clear that the administration isn’t changing its tune. She stated, “Nobody is changing the administration’s immigration enforcement agenda,” asserting that the president’s policies have successfully sent immigrants out of the U.S., whether through forced deportations or by their own departure, and have sealed up the U.S.-Mexico border.

This whole situation puts DHS at a major crossroads. After those intense deportation sweeps in cities like Minneapolis and the tragic deaths of at least three U.S. citizens at the hands of officers, Democratic lawmakers are outright refusing to provide routine funding unless the department makes some serious policy changes. On the other side of the coin, you have people who believe Trump won the White House largely because of his mass deportation promises. 

This debate is happening as the U.S., celebrating its 250th year, grapples with its identity as a nation of immigrants. It’s a stark contrast to images of masked federal agents breaking car windows and detaining people suspected of being in the U.S. without proper legal standing. The Republican-controlled Congress even allocated about $170 billion in last year’s tax cuts bill to fuel these efforts, more than tripling ICE’s budget. 

Some Republicans are pushing for what one called a “more humane approach.” Senator Ron Johnson (R-WI), who is usually a staunch opponent of illegal immigration, pointed out that in his state, immigrants milk most of the dairy cows. Agriculture has been hit so badly that the administration has changed the policy for farmhands

Johnson questioned the practicality of mass deportations, asking, “Can we just turn back the clock and have all these people who came in here illegally, just be back home?” For being a senator for the land of immigrants, he seems to have just realized that these immigrants are just like his ancestors. Here for the opportunity.

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