His policies are driven by racism and Christian nationalism
John Feffer for Policy In Focus
The Trump administration aspires to deport a million people in its first year of office. The president has also spoken of the more ambitious goal of deporting 15-20 million undocumented people overall, even if that category probably covers only 14 million folks. The discrepancy of a couple million people shouldn’t bother Donald Trump. He’s happy to deport those with green cards, H-1B visas, and even American citizens.
Deporting a million people in a year is a heavy lift. The
previous record, 409,849 people, was during the Obama
administration, as part of the 1.5 million
deportations he conducted in his first term. Trump, no doubt, wants to
best Barack Obama in
this category, since he’s determined to outshine the former president in every
respect, even the dubious ones.
Despite all the high-profile seizures by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the deals to dump Venezuelans to Salvadoran prisons, and the truly crazy efforts to send people to countries they’ve never even visited like Eswatini and South Sudan, the Trump administration has managed to deport only about 350,000 people through the end of August.
That includes the 200,000 by ICE and the rest by Customs and
Border Protection and the Coast Guard, plus some self-deportations. Another
60,000 are languishing in ICE
detention centers. The government is currently monitoring about 180,000
families and individuals in its Alternatives to Detention program, which may
end up becoming a Preparation for Deportation program.
Most of the people currently in detention—over 70%—have never committed any crime, which undermines the claim by the Trump administration that he’s going after the “bad hombres.”
Detention is pretty much a fast track to deportation. After
all, detainees often don’t have access to lawyers. As the American
Prospect reports, “ICE uses bureaucracy and location
transfers to isolate their detainees from both their families and their
lawyers, limiting their ability to get out of their predicaments and increasing
misery and hopelessness.” One immigration lawyer told me that some of his
clients have disappeared for several days in ICE detention—and these included
people who were willing to self-deport.
Trump is not close to meeting his ambitious deportation
goals. That’s no comfort to all the immigrants whose lives he has already
upended.



















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