Trump's goal of mass deportations fell short. But he has new plans for a
second term
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[September 23, 2024]
By ELLIOT SPAGAT
SAN DIEGO (AP) — Donald Trump has long pledged to deport millions of
people, but he's bringing more specifics to his current bid for the
White House: invoking wartime powers, relying on like-minded governors
and using the military.
Trump’s record as president shows a vast gulf between his ambitions and
the legal, fiscal and political realities of mass deportations of people
in the United States illegally — 11 million in January 2022, by the
Homeland Security Department's latest estimate. Former President Barack
Obama carried out 432,000 deportations in 2013, the highest annual total
since records were kept.
Deportations under Trump never topped 350,000. But he and his chief
immigration policy architect, Stephen Miller, have offered clues in
interviews and rallies of taking a different approach if they are
returned to power in November. They could benefit from lessons learned
during their of four years in office and, potentially, from more
Trump-appointed judges.
“What Trump seems to be contemplating is potentially lawful,” said
Joseph Nunn, counsel at the Brennan Center for Justice at New York
University’s School of Law. “There might not be a lot of legal barriers.
It is going to be logistically extraordinarily complicated and
difficult. The military is not going to like doing it and they are going
to drag their feet as much as they can, but it is possible, so it should
be taken seriously.”
The Trump campaign, asked how his pledge would be carried out, said
Trump would begin the largest deportation program in U.S. history,
without elaborating in detail. Karoline Leavitt, a spokeswoman, said
Trump “would marshal every federal and state power necessary to
institute the largest deportation operation of illegal criminals, drug
dealers, and human traffickers."
How would Trump overcome inevitable legal challenges?
Trump has said he would invoke the Alien Enemies Act, a 1798 law that
allows the president to deport any noncitizen from a country that the
U.S. is at war with.
Texas Gov, Greg Abbott has advanced a theory that illegal immigration
amounts to an invasion to justify state enforcement measures, so far
without success, but legal scholars say judges may be reluctant to
second-guess what a president considers a foreign aggression.
The sweeping Alien Enemies Act authority may sidestep a law that bans
the military from civilian law enforcement.
Trump has said he would focus on deploying the National Guard, whose
troops can be activated on orders of a governor. Miller says troops
under sympathetic Republican governors would send troops to nearby
states that refuse to participate.
“The Alabama National Guard is going to arrest illegal aliens in Alabama
and the Virginia National Guard in Virginia. And if you’re going to go
into an unfriendly state like Maryland, well, there would just be
Virginia doing the arrest in Maryland, right, very close, very nearby,”
Miller said last year on “The Charlie Kirk Show.”
The military has been peripherally involved at the border since
President George W. Bush’s administration with activities that are not
deemed to be law enforcement, such as surveillance, vehicle maintenance
and installing concertina wire.
Nunn, of New York University's Brennan Center, said Trump may look to
2020, when he ordered the National Guard to disperse peaceful Black
Lives Matter protests near the White House, despite the mayor's
opposition. Trump did so without invoking the 18th-century war powers
law, but the District of Columbia’s federal status gives the president
outsized authority to act.
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Trump may also contend with rights afforded under immigration law
and court rulings that took shape after 1798, including a right to
seek asylum that became law in 1980. Under a 2001 Supreme Court
ruling, people in the country illegally can't be detained
indefinitely if there is no reasonable chance their countries will
take them back. Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua and others are either
slow to accept their citizens or refuse.
How would Trump pay for this?
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is funded by Congress for
41,500 detention beds this year, raising questions about where Trump
would house people before they board deportation flights and how
long they could hold them if countries refuse to take them back.
Miller floated the idea of “large-scale staging grounds near the
border, most likely in Texas.”
ICE officers are painstakingly deliberate, researching backgrounds
of their targets and prioritizing people with criminal convictions.
They try to capture suspects outside their homes because they
generally work without court warrants and people don't have to let
them inside.
A single arrest may require hours of surveillance and research, a
job that one ICE official likened to watching paint dry.
“On practical level, it will be nearly impossible for (Trump) to do
the things he’s talking about, even if could bring in the military,”
said John Sandweg, a senior Homeland Security Department official in
the Obama administration.
Obama's deportation numbers were made possible by local police who
turned people over to ICE, but many state and local governments have
since introduced limits on cooperation with federal immigration
authorities. Obama's presidency also predated a surge of
asylum-seekers at the border, which drained limited resources of the
Trump and Biden administrations.
How would a mass deportation drive fare politically?
While many support Trump's plans, mass deportation could tear apart
families, exacerbate labor shortages and uproot people with deep
ties to their communities. Pew Research Center estimates 70% of
households with at least one person in the United States illegally
also have someone in the country legally.
Military leaders are likely to resist because it would undercut
other priorities and damage morale, Nunn said.
“The military is going see this and say this is not the kind of duty
that soldiers signed up for," he said. "This is getting the military
involved in domestic politics in a way the military doesn’t like to
do.”
Adam Goodman, associate professor of history and Latin American
studies at the University of Illinois, Chicago, who has written
about deportations, said a threat of a mass expulsion can have a
serious impact even if it isn't carried out. He thinks it is highly
unlikely that Trump can do what he promises but it can strike fear
in immigrant communities.
In June 2019, Trump announced ICE would "begin the process of
removing the millions of illegal aliens" the following week. A month
later, the agency said it targeted about 2,100 people, resulting in
35 arrests, indicating the president's plans fell far short but only
after they generated widespread concern in immigrant communities.
Trump himself acknowledged the political perils during an interview
Sunday with journalist Sharyl Attkisson. “You put one wrong person
onto a bus or onto an airplane and your radical left lunatics will
try and make it sound like it’s the worst thing that’s ever
happened," Trump said, before repeating his pledge: "But we’re
getting the criminals out. And we’re going to do that fast.”
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Associated Press writer Nicholas Riccardi in Denver contributed to
this report.
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