THE CASE FOR MASS DEPORTATIONS. Byron York

THE CASE FOR MASS DEPORTATIONS.
November 11, 2024. Washington Examiner

President-elect Donald Trump has pledged to “launch the largest deportation of criminals in American history.” That is a quote from a Nov. 2 rally in Salem, Virginia, but Trump has said precisely the same thing dozens of times. Still, through the course of a long campaign, with his improvisational style, Trump has occasionally worded his pledge differently. For example, at his Madison Square Garden rally, Trump said, “On day one, I will launch the largest deportation program in American history to get the criminals out.” At an Oct. 25 event in Austin, Texas, Trump said he “will launch the largest deportation program in American history” before adding, “We have no choice. We have got to get all of these criminals, these murderers, and drug dealers, and everything, we’re getting them out.” Back on May 24, at his rally in the South Bronx, Trump pledged to “immediately begin the largest criminal deportation operation in our country’s history.” So, variations in wording aside, when Trump talks about mass deportation, he is talking about the mass deportation of criminals.

It’s hard to imagine opposing Trump’s proposal. Who would want to help murderers and drug dealers who entered the country illegally remain in the United States? Yet we have seen much talk that Trump deportation plans go far, far beyond criminals and will ultimately lead to 10 million, 15 million, or perhaps even 20 million people being removed from the country. Part of this is media hysteria. But part of it comes from loose talk by Trump and his advisers. In a Time magazine interview in April, in particular, the interviewer appeared to want Trump to announce that he would herd migrants into detention camps. After several questions, Trump finally said, “I would not rule out anything.” That, of course, led to speculation that Trump would herd migrants into detention camps.

But the Trump plan has been visible in plain sight for quite a while. First, the new administration will seek to deport quickly those illegal immigrants who are deemed national security threats. At the same time, it will pursue illegal immigrants with criminal records, either in the U.S. or some other country. And all the while, it will assign priority to the illegal migrants whose cases have already been adjudicated and ordered removed.

“You concentrate on the public safety threats and the national security threats first because those are the worst of the worst,” Tom Homan, recently named as Trump’s “border czar,” said over the weekend on Fox News. “So, it’s going to be the worst first. That’s how it has to be done. We know a record number of people on the terrorist watch list have crossed this border. We know a record number of terrorists have been released in this country. We have already arrested some [who were] planning attacks. So, look, the president is dead on when he said criminal threats, national security threats are going to be prioritized. And that’s the way it’s going to be.”

There is a clear guide for doing this. Last year, Immigration and Customs Enforcement reported that as of Sept. 30, 2023, there were 1,292,830 people in the U.S. illegally who have had full legal due process and have received a final deportation order from an immigration judge. In the ensuing year, there are estimates that number has grown to somewhere between 1.35 million and 1.6 million.

The vast majority of those people are not in detention. But they have had final orders of deportation, so they are subject to removal at any time. It’s just that the Biden administration has not removed them. “They were placed into removal proceedings before immigration judges, either because they entered illegally, or overstayed, or committed a crime in the United States,” said Andrew Arthur, a former Immigration and Naturalization Service official, Capitol Hill lawyer, and immigration judge currently with the Center for Immigration Studies, which favors more rigorous enforcement of immigration law. “Some of them have made asylum claims. Some didn’t make any claim at all. Some of them may have come many years ago, and they’ve been sitting on the docket for decades.”

Arthur said the U.S. has the resources to remove about 400,000 people per year. With more resources and more determination, that number could go to 600,000. So, even if the second Trump administration gets a quick start, and Trump is determined to do so, it could take years to remove those whose cases have already been decided. In doing so, Trump officials will likely use the same set of priorities — national security threats and criminals first. Then, it could focus on those with the most recent orders of removal. As for any on the list who were ordered deported decades ago but never left, authorities will have to decide what to do on a case-by-case basis.

Would Trump deportations go beyond that group of 1.35 million to 1.6 million already ordered removed? Remember that many more millions crossed illegally into the U.S. during the Biden years. What to do with them? The vast majority do not have valid claims of asylum or any legal right to remain in the U.S.

In an ironic twist, it is possible that the second Trump administration will rely on a document known as the Mayorkas Memorandum to decide those cases. On Sept. 30, 2021, as the border incursion was moving into high gear, Biden Department of Homeland Security head Alejandro Mayorkas sent the administration’s top immigration officials a set of guidelines for enforcing immigration law. In the memo, Mayorkas laid out rules for deporting illegal immigrants.

“We will prioritize for apprehension and removal noncitizens who are a threat to our national security, public safety, and border security,” Mayorkas wrote. The first group was terrorists and spies. The second was criminals. And then there was the third group, the threats to border security. “A noncitizen who poses a threat to border security is a priority for apprehension and removal,” Mayorkas wrote. “A noncitizen is a threat to border security if (a) they are apprehended at the border or port of entry while attempting to unlawfully enter the United States; or (b) they are apprehended in the United States after unlawfully entering after November 1, 2020.”

If Trump were to apply the Nov. 1, 2020, standard, the Mayorkas standard, to removals, deporting those who had most recently crossed illegally into the U.S., he would have a basis to reverse a significant part of the Biden border rush. “Those people are already a priority for removal,” Arthur notes, “so Trump could just say we’re doing what the Biden administration said it was doing.”

If Trump actually does any of this — that is, if he increases deportations with an emphasis on national security threats, criminal, and recent entrants — it will have a powerful deterrent effect on people in foreign nations considering illegal entry into the U.S. It will also likely motivate recent illegal arrivals into the U.S., the ones with the fewest connections to this country, to leave on their own.

Trump’s actions, if he takes them, could certainly be characterized as “mass deportations” since they would involve the removal of perhaps 1 million people. It would certainly be “the largest deportation of criminals in American history.” On one hand, it would not please the Trump supporters who want to deport every single person in the U.S. illegally. After all, every illegal border crosser has violated U.S. law by unlawfully entering the country. On the other hand, prioritized deportations would be a significant restoration of the rule of law as it applies to the U.S. border, and that would be a very good thing.