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Date: November 17, 2024 at 11:26:06
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Inside Trump’s Plan to Deport Millions

URL: https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2024/01/trump-2024-immigration-policy-mass-deportations-stephen-miller/


Mother Jones

Invoke the Alien Enemies Act. Mobilize the US military. Build massive "output"
facilities.

How Trump will conduct mass deportations—and what experts say would occur
if these plans are attempted.

MOTHER JONES link
Inside Trump’s Plan to Deport Millions

Experts explain how the former president would realize his vision of mass
removal.

ISABELA DIASJANUARY 7, 2024

A digital illustration depicts a tense scene with several armed law enforcement
officers surrounding a group of detained individuals. The detainees, with their
hands bound behind their backs, are being loaded into the back of a truck under
the watchful eyes of the officers. The background is shaded in a muted yellow
tone, with silhouettes of more vehicles and personnel visible in the distance.
Barbed wire is seen in the foreground.
Simon Prades

For our September+October issue, we investigated the Border Patrol’s sharp
growth, its troubling record on civil liberties, its culture of impunity, and its role in
shaping the current political moment—one that echoes the anti-immigrant fever
that led to the agency’s creation a century ago. Read the whole package here.

At a December rally in Reno, Nevada, GOP frontrunner Donald Trump made his
regular promise: To treat immigration as if the United States is at war. He accused
President Joe Biden of launching a “military invasion” against the United States
by allowing “drugs, criminals, gang members, and terrorists” to cross the US-
Mexico border. He vowed to conduct the “largest deportation operation in
American history,” inspired by President Eisenhower’s slur-named “Operation
Wetback.” And he promised to “clean up” the country, which has turned into a
“dumping ground” and “safe haven for blood thirsty criminals [and] savage gang
members.”

Trump’s hyperbolic anti-immigrant language and pledges to deport millions of
undocumented immigrants is hardly new. He ran on it back in 2016 and then,
advised by hardliner Stephen Miller, in his first term Trump implemented some of
the most draconian immigration policies in recent memory.

MOTHER JONES TOP STORIES




Still, as failed GOP contender Gov. Ron DeSantis noted, Trump ultimately
deported fewer people than his predecessor Barack Obama (who was dubbed
the “Deporter-in-Chief“). Now, Trump is vowing to take a step further: promising
to weaponize the full force of government against immigrants.

That means doubling down on a “Promise Broken” from his first term to remove
all undocumented immigrants from the country. Deportations—as Miller, the
founder and president of the “anti-woke” America First Legal group, has declared
on X—would begin on Inauguration Day. “If President Trump is back in the Oval
office in January,” Miller told Turning Point USA’s Charlie Kirk, the anti-immigrant
agenda will “commence immediately and it will be joyous and it will be wonderful
and it will be everything you want it to be.”

Some of Trump and Miller’s proposals may sound bizarre, far-fetched, or at least
bound to draw legal challenges, but they shouldn’t be dismissed either—
especially in light of a 2022 Supreme Court decision that could hinder lawsuits
challenging unlawful immigration enforcement policies.

Here’s how a second Trump presidency would go about conducting mass
deportations and what immigration experts and former officials say would occur
if these plans were attempted by a presidential administration.


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Invoke the Alien Enemies Act
What Trump and Miller say they would do: A wartime statute that was part of the
infamous 1798 Alien and Sedition Acts, the Alien Enemies Act authorized the
president to detain, relocate, or deport male citizens, 14 or older, of hostile
nations. (How to define such a country is complex, but basically it refers to
situations where this is “a declared war between the United States and any
foreign nation or government, or any invasion or predatory incursion” that has
been done “against the territory of the United States.”) During World War II, it was
used to detain citizens of Germany, Italy, and Japan.

As Rolling Stone recently reported, a second Trump administration would make
the argument that gangs and drug cartels in Latin American countries have risen
to the level of “state actors” and are “engaged in an invasion on behalf of foreign
narco-states.” Invoking the Alien Enemies Act, Miller has said, would allow them
to “suspend the due process that normally applies to a removal proceeding.”

George Fishman, who served as Department of Homeland Security’s deputy
general counsel during the Trump administration, suggested one of the benefits
of invoking the Alien Enemies Act would be to deport large numbers of students
from China in case of a war between both countries. (He also acknowledged that
there are “very serious roadblocks” to Trump’s plan of claiming an invasion by
drug cartels and gangs.)

What experts say would happen: The Alien Enemies Act can’t be simply used as
a basic immigration enforcement tool. “That is a ridiculously dumb idea,” says
Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, policy director at the American Immigration Council. “It is
something that even the most conservative Federalist Society Trump appointees
would laugh out of court.”


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As much as conservative politicians like to claim otherwise, the United States
isn’t currently in a declared war or under a foreign invasion. Even if that were not
the case, Reichlin-Melnick explains, the Alien Enemies Act applies to specific
countries. “You cannot simply say we are being invaded by ‘drugs’ and then call
for all drug dealers to be deported because ‘drugs’ is not a country,” he says. “You
would have to essentially make a declaration as to every single country that
those people come from—effectively declaring that the United States is being
invaded by dozens of countries around the world.” That would in turn create all
sorts of diplomatic issues and essentially a “massive foreign relations nightmare.”

The end result? Some of these countries that actively cooperate with the United
States in managing border flows might stop doing so, potentially leading to more
drugs and migrants coming through.

There would also be economic costs. “The US-Mexico-Canada Agreement
(USMCA, which replaced NAFTA in 2020) has led to profitable trade agreements
between Canada and Mexico,” says ManoLasya Perepa, policy and practice
counsel for the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA). “Declaring war
on one of its two major trading partners will surely negatively affect businesses
and the people of the United States.”

In addition, declaring war against Latin American countries to invoke the Alien
Enemies Act, Perepa explains, would have the effect of strengthening the asylum
claims from migrants “because a Trump administration would give credibility to
[claims that] cartels and gangs are the government in these countries.”


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Experts also say ignoring due process in removal proceedings for immigrants
from certain countries would not survive court challenges alleging discrimination
based on national origin. “There is a wealth of case law indicating its
unconstitutionality,” says Perepa.

Still, a Supreme Court decision preventing federal judges from issuing injunctions
blocking unlawful immigration policies as the cases work their way through the
legal system is a massive sea change. “The courts will be a significantly more
limited check on his immigration enforcement actions in the second term than
they were in the first term,” says Reichlin-Melnick.

Deploy personnel from other federal agencies, mobilize the US military, and call in
state and local law enforcement
What Trump and Miller say they would do: When asked by the hosts of the Clay
Travis and Buck Sexton radio show how the mass deportations project would be
realized, Miller said it would require a “switch to indiscriminate or large-scale
enforcement activities.” Miller described going to every place where there are
known congregations of “illegals” and taking people to federal detention. To
accomplish that, there would need to be a massive increase in personnel, he
explained. Miller then proposed pulling “10 to 11,000 guns and badges” from a
myriad of places: Homeland Security Investigations (HIS), the DEA, the ATF, the
FBI, and even National Park Service law enforcement, in addition to gathering
“badges’ from the US military and local law enforcement (particularly sheriffs) to
carry out large-scale deportations across the country.


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What experts say would happen: Right now, there are “currently more than 8,700
employees that” makeup HSI, the investigative arm of DHS, AILA’s supervisory
policy and practice counsel Jennifer Ibañez Whitlock explains. “This idea would
essentially gut the entire workforce.”

Under Miller’s idea, all the various goals of law enforcement—stopping terrorism,
disrupting organized crime, maintaining calm at national parks—would be put
aside for immigration enforcement. “What you’d be telling the American public is
we don’t care that a pedophile is going after your child,” says Reichlin-Melnick,
“we need to go after a grandma who’s been here for 30 years undocumented.”

Deputizing personnel from other federal agencies also raises the obvious
question: What happens to the work they are being pulled away from? During the
period when the Trump administration separated migrant families at the border
under the zero-tolerance policy that prosecuted border crossers, federal drug
trafficking prosecutions plummeted. “You’re talking about a free-for-all on crime
for everything else when you’re spending all your resources only focused on
undocumented immigrants,” Reichlin-Melnick adds.

Then there are also clear pitfalls of asking agents to do work for which they are
not prepared. Relying on untrained agents to enforce immigration law, says Doris
Meissner, former commissioner of the US Immigration and Naturalization Service
(INS) under Bill Clinton, “would generate enormous violations of civil rights,
create [racial] profiling, and sweep up large numbers of US citizens who are not
required to carry any documents that prove they are properly in the country.” This
kind of agenda, Meissner adds, ultimately perpetuates “sharp swings and [an]
inability as a country to settle into an immigration system that is up to date and
modernized and reflects laws that are in our national interest.”


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Deputize the National Guard for immigration enforcement
What Trump and Miller say they would do: “You go to the red state governors and
you say, give us your National Guard,” Miller explained on Kirk’s podcast. “We will
deputize them as immigration enforcement officers…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.”

What experts say would happen: The Posse Comitatus Act generally bars the US
military, including the National Guard, from engaging in domestic law
enforcement. (The New York Times reported Miller saying that the Trump
administration would get around this by invoking the Insurrection Act to allow the
use of federal troops to arrest migrants.) The Bush, Obama, and Trump
administrations all deployed federal troops to the Southern border, but they were
limited to logistical and administrative roles. To deploy the National Guard for
immigration enforcement purposes, Reichlin-Melnick explains, Trump and Miller
would therefore have to override the Department of Defense’s interpretation of
the Posse Comitatus Act.

“In this America, instead of a ‘Maryland Welcomes You’ sign at the border of
Virginia and Maryland, Mr. Miller would have militarized checkpoints at state
borders to detain and arrest individuals who may not have the right immigration
papers,” says Whitlock. “Deputized or not, the National Guard is not trained to
conduct an evaluation of someone’s immigration status on the spot, let alone
adjudicate claims to US citizenship. This tactic would prove highly disruptive to
our economies and communities, almost certainly lead to racial profiling, and
bring about a host of individual case litigation on behalf of wrongfully detained
US citizens. There also seems to be zero consideration for the millions of mixed-
status families, including minor US citizen children, living in the interior who would
be split apart by these mass raids.”

Build massive staging “output” facilities near border infrastructure to carry out
removals
What Trump and Miller say they would do: To detain immigrants before carrying
out their deportations, Miller said the Trump administration would build massive
holding facilities that could accommodate between 50,000 to 70,000 people at
any given time. Such an undertaking, he said, “would be greater than any national
infrastructure project we’ve done to date.”


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Miller also suggested having weekly deportation flights on different days to
places like the Northern Triangle countries, India, or China. “That way, as you’re
getting people who’ve been here for different lengths of time,” he said on a
podcast, “when their case ends, whether it be in an hour or a week, when it ends,
there’ll be a plane ready and fueled up and ready to take them home.”

What experts say would happen: “Building a facility like Miller describes is
reminiscent of Stalin’s building of his gulags,” Amy Grenier, AILA’s policy and
practice counsel, says, “and would be antithetical to American values.”

But it isn’t impossible. The Trump administration built tent cities close to the
border to temporarily detain migrant families. In 2021, the Biden administration
started holding thousands of unaccompanied minors at a makeshift shelter at
Fort Bliss, an Army base in Texas. Issues with the case management of children
and timely release led migrants to “experience distress, anxiety, and in some
cases, panic attacks,” according to a watchdog report.

“If you throw together a bunch of tents in the border and shove 50,000 people in
them,” Reichlin-Melnick says, “people are going to die.”


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On flights, Miller seems to ignore the current reality. “There are already, under the
Biden administration, frequent deportation flights to Northern Triangle countries
—there were 36 flights to Guatemala between January 1 and 21,” says Yael
Schacher, immigration historian and director for the Americas and Europe at
Refugees International. “But so many people are coming from other countries—
and many [countries] will likely refuse to accept an increased number of
deportation flights unless President Trump gives them something in exchange.”
China “still refuses to accept planes,” Schacher notes, as they have since the last
Trump administration. “I don’t know how Trump will force China to take people.”

Overall, Reichlin-Melnick says, Trump and Miller’s plan “ignores the actual laws,
the resource challenges, and the significant public opposition if they actually
started trying to do any of this.”

Read the rest of our Border Patrol investigation here.


Responses:
[444184]


444184


Date: November 17, 2024 at 11:32:55
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Trump's policy would STRENGTHEN migrants' asylum claims...


"In addition, declaring war against Latin American countries to invoke the Alien
Enemies Act, Perepa explains, would have the effect of strengthening the asylum
claims from migrants “because a Trump administration would give credibility to
[claims that] cartels and gangs are the government in these countries.” "


Responses:
None


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