What the Data Reveals About Trump’s Push to Arrest and Deport More Migrants - The data shows that interior enforcement has more than doubled since Trump took office, filling up immigration detention facilities across the country.

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Time.com

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President Donald Trump campaigned on delivering the largest mass deportation effort in US history. What he has delivered so far is a dramatic surge in arrests by Immigration and Customs Enforcement of people who were living in the U.S.

The data shows that interior enforcement has more than doubled since Trump took office, filling up immigration detention facilities across the country.
It’s those stepped-up efforts by ICE agents in workplaces, courthouses and homes to arrest people that prompted protests in Los Angeles last week. Trump’s decision to deploy the California National Guard there over the objections of state and local officials sparked an escalation in protests and violent clashes with law enforcement over the weekend, according to local officials.


Trump’s upswing in ICE arrests may be starting to yield a surge in deportations. The total number of deportations has stayed essentially level compared to the Biden era—until recently, when the numbers appear to have risen sharply.
Here’s what the data shows about how the Trump Administration has revamped immigration enforcement and deportations in a few short months.

ICE Arrests Have Soared Under Trump​

In Trump’s first six months, the number of people being apprehended on the Southern Border has plummeted. Instead, an increasing share of those held in immigration detention are people who were arrested by ICE. The most recent ICE detention data shows the average number of people held has gone up 25% since Trump took office.
This represents a dramatic shift from how immigration enforcement has long been conducted in the U.S. Under the Biden administration, the majority of people who ended up in immigration detention were those who had recently crossed the border and were arrested by agents with Customs and Border Patrol (CPB). Holding border crossers in detention put them on a faster docket in removal proceedings, paving the way to send them out of the country at a faster clip.


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One major reason for this shift away from CPB arrests is that fewer people are coming to the border illegally than they were during most of the Biden era.
Read more:
Inside Donald Trump's Mass Deportation Operation
In a recent interview with TIME, Trump border czar Tom Homan said he would like to double the amount of bed space ICE has in detention from 50,000 to 100,000. Having more people held in detention centers could increase the pace of both ICE arrests and deportations.

Deportations Are Starting to Trend Higher​

Trump told TIME last year he wanted to target 15 million people for removal. He said he was open to using the military to do it, in the face of restrictions in the Posse Comitatus Act that limits the use of the military on U.S. soil. In a campaign interview with ABC News in August, J.D. Vance said, “Let’s start with 1 million.”


At the end of April, the Administration said it had deported more than 139,000 migrants, which was behind pace to reach their aggressive targets. That is a reflection of just how time-consuming and challenging it is to find and remove people living in communities. On Tuesday, the Department of Homeland Security provided TIME with updated figures from Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin: more than 207,000 deported. That represents a significant increase in the Administration's deportations and may reflect the more sweeping and intrusive actions immigration officials have taken in recent weeks. For context, the federal government deported 271,484 people in the 2024 fiscal year, which ended on Sept. 30.

The total number of people being deported has basically been stable, if slightly up, even as an increasing portion are those arrested inside the US by ICE. In May, ICE increased the pace of removal fights, a sign that the number of deportations could increase at a faster rate in the coming months. The Trump administration has asked Congress for more funding to pay for deportations and an increased pace in immigration enforcement. The most recent version of the“Big Beautiful Bill” that Trump is pushing Congress to pass has $168 billion for immigration and border enforcement. That would be a five-fold increase in such funding over the current year, which Congress set at $33 billion.


Part of the challenge is finding places to accept deportees. Trump has defied long-standing norms and, some argue, broken laws by sending migrants to a notorious prison in El Salvador and the U.S. military base at Guantánamo Bay in Cuba, while putting others on planes bound for Panama and South Sudan. Homan tells TIME the Administration is in talks with three more countries to accept U.S. deportees.
With the number of deportations not increasing as fast as they would like, Trump officials are pressuring ICE and other government agencies to boost immigration arrests.
They are also encouraging migrants in the U.S. to return to their home countries on their own. Trump has offered $1,000 and a free commercial flight to people willing to “self deport.”
 
Gee, where’s the “Bu.. But BIDEN and OBAMA deported MORE than Trump!” Crowd now?

As you can see, things are ramping up, though it’s not something where you can just move a slider on a screen upwards.

They’ll need to build more facilities to hold them, probably buy some planes to fly deportees back 24-7. It’ll all take time though we’re off to a decent start!
 
At the end of April, the Administration said it had deported more than 139,000 migrants, which was behind pace to reach their aggressive targets. That is a reflection of just how time-consuming and challenging it is to find and remove people living in communities.
Because pieces of garbage like this journoscum keep getting in the way. It wouldn't be so fucking "time-consuming and challenging" if you asshats realized you lost and this is what the majority of Americans want and gracefully stepped aside for WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE!

We are not just full, we are overflowing. It is time for ALL ILLEGALS to go home.
In Trump’s first six months, the number of people being apprehended on the Southern Border has plummeted. Instead, an increasing share of those held in immigration detention are people who were arrested by ICE. The most recent ICE detention data shows the average number of people held has gone up 25% since Trump took office.
Because electing Trump was a clear sign to every illegal traveling here to turn around and go back, which is a good thing you fucking moron. Its also because we are not just letting illegals lay about within our borders like before, again a good thing.
This represents a dramatic shift from how immigration enforcement has long been conducted in the U.S. Under the Biden administration, the majority of people who ended up in immigration detention were those who had recently crossed the border and were arrested by agents with Customs and Border Patrol (CPB). Holding border crossers in detention put them on a faster docket in removal proceedings, paving the way to send them out of the country at a faster clip.
Because Biden's admin left the door open and let the majority into the country with no hounds at their heels. They only arrested a paltry few at the border crossings for optics and because some of them were actually wanted criminals (even then they missed most of them). THIS IS NOT A GOOD THING!!!
 
At the end of April, the Administration said it had deported more than 139,000 migrants,

On Tuesday, the Department of Homeland Security provided TIME with updated figures from Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin: more than 207,000 deported.

For context, the federal government deported 271,484 people in the 2024 fiscal year, which ended on Sept. 30.
Under the Biden administration, the majority of people who ended up in immigration detention were those who had recently crossed the border


That’s neat. Big upswing in May.
 
Gee, where’s the “Bu.. But BIDEN and OBAMA deported MORE than Trump!” Crowd now?

As you can see, things are ramping up, though it’s not something where you can just move a slider on a screen upwards.

They’ll need to build more facilities to hold them, probably buy some planes to fly deportees back 24-7. It’ll all take time though we’re off to a decent start!
Obama did deport a shitton of illegals. That's true and it's important to keep in mind.

But it's important to understand why and how. Why? It wasn't specifically anything unique to Obama or his policies themselves; the system was merely working correctly as it was built. How? This is key. The immigration courts were thoroughly funded during his term. They worked like greased lightning. That's the key, or at least a big part of it. Get a conveyor belt to get these illegals their hearings and we can have them back in their shitholes of origin (or any shithole, frankly) in time for dinner.

It's crucial to get all our ducks in a row. Even if Trump manages to fuck around and be loose with the legals to start with, the liberal NGOs will get wise and put a hard brake on it at some point.

It's good and smart to get the legals correct early. It'll pay off later.
 
On Tuesday, the Department of Homeland Security provided TIME with updated figures from Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin: more than 207,000 deported.
Assuming this remains the base level of deportations: Than Trump will have deported 2,127,960 illegals over the course of his second term.

The math is:
January 20th, 2025 to Tuesday, June 10th, 2025 (142 days)
Second Term length: 1,460 days
1,460 days into 142 day segments equals 10.28 segments
10.28 x 207,000 = 2,127,960 total deportations.

And remember Miller is trying to up those numbers. Things are looking great!
 
Is this before or after he said he was going to scale back deportations for farm hotel and restaurant workers. That's a large number of beaners right there.
 
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