Tag: u.s. immigration and customs enforcement
How Mass Deportations May Inflict Lasting Damage On Republicans

How Mass Deportations May Inflict Lasting Damage On Republicans

In early December, I warned that Donald Trump’s mass-deportation plans could backfire on Republicans. The core problem? Manpower. It takes a lot of resources to round up undocumented immigrants—and that’s feasible only in red states, where Republican governors are likely to lend their own law enforcement forces to help U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. In sanctuary cities, federal agents are mostly on their own.

This dynamic has serious implications for the 2030 census and reapportionment. Undocumented immigrants are counted in the census. If deportations and fear-driven migration to safer states reduce the population in Republican strongholds like Florida and Texas, those states might gain fewer House seats than expected. Meanwhile, blue states like California, Illinois, and New York—previously on track to lose representation—could see those losses softened.

That was the theory at the time. Now we’re seeing some proof it may be playing out.

A new piece in The Times of London offers a telling anecdote: A Miami construction manager witnessed a raid where 15 to 20 federal agents and police officers stormed his job site … and arrested just two undocumented workers. “It was just an obscenely outrageous show of force, over the top, it just seemed like too much,” the manager said.

And that’s with local police support. It’s exactly why Trump’s crackdown struggles in sanctuary cities—no local cooperation, plus mutual aid networks that sound the alarm when ICE is nearby.

In Miami, the consequences are stacking up fast.

First, it’s choking Florida’s booming construction industry. “In January the Associated Builders and Contractors—a trade organization—said the construction industry would need to attract 439,000 workers this year to meet demand,” reported the Times.

Without them? Soaring labor, housing, and construction costs.

But instead of recruiting more workers, Florida is bleeding them. And another Trump action is making things even worse. “The legal workforce is expected to shrink further after the administration succeeded in removing temporary protection status (TPS), a type of immigration status, from 472,000 Venezuelans,” the Times notes. “Hundreds of thousands of people from other nationalities are also likely to lose their TPS.”

Republicans often claim that slashing the immigrant population will lower housing prices. The worst offenders include right-wing Cuban retirees, like Havana-born Jose Martinez, who came during the Mariel boatlift. “Sorry but it’s true, we don’t know who these people are,” he told the Times. “We came here the right way, we came legally. These people are different. Some of them are criminals.”

Apparently, “the right way” meant getting Cold War favoritism that Cubans enjoyed at the expense of every other Latino group. And as any honest observer will tell you, that policy was horseshit. The Mariel boatlift? It included tens of thousands of criminals because Fidel Castro emptied his prisons into Florida.

Here’s the problem for Republicans: Florida’s economy can’t sustain its torrid growth without new housing—and developing new housing requires labor. Instead, labor shortages—and Trump’s tariffs—will jack up costs, deterring people from moving there. In addition, the deportations themselves will further mitigate the state’s population growth, impacting the census count and the state’s projected pickup of four electoral votes and House seats.

And just as I predicted, immigrants are fleeing Florida. That same construction manager? After the raid, another of his crew members—one with legal work status—left for Georgia, where immigration enforcement is lighter.

Los Angeles, despite Trump’s best efforts to crack down, may now become a magnet for immigrants. With tens of thousands of homes needing rebuilding, and no local labor force to do it fast, immigrant workers will go where they can earn and live in peace.

Trump has unleashed policies that are scrambling economic and demographic trends. The fallout could be huge—and it’s unlikely to benefit the people who cheered him on.

Reprinted with permission from Daily Kos.

In Idaho, MAGA Party Official Snitches On GOP Legislator For Hiring 'Illegals'

In Idaho, MAGA Party Official Snitches On GOP Legislator For Hiring 'Illegals'

One Republican state representative in Idaho was recently caught off-guard when a far-right political activist had Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents sent to her potato farm.

According to Newsweek, Rep. Stephanie Mickelsen — who is serving her second term in Idaho House District 32A — is now publicly railing against Ada County, Idaho Republican Party vice chairman Ryan Spoon in an op-ed. Mickelsen recalled in a recent essay for the Idaho Statesman that Spoon had ICE agents deployed to her farm, which resulted in them arresting one farm worker roughly a week after Spoon tweeted at President Donald Trump's border czar, Tom Homan. She didn't mention Spoon by name but referred to him as "someone working remotely for an insurance company who thinks he knows Idaho values and the [agriculture] business better than you do."

"Could you please send some illegal immigration raids to the businesses owned by Idaho state Rep. Stephanie Mickelson," Spoon wrote on January 21, misspelling Mickelsen's name. "She has been bragging about how many illegals her businesses employ."

Mickelsen wrote in her op-ed that her farm "complies with all applicable laws regarding employment and immigration," though she would also "welcome improvements to the laws and enforcement." But she didn't spare her critics among the GOP base who criticized her for acknowledging that large and influential sectors of the economy like agriculture are heavily reliant on immigrant labor.

"As a state representative, I’ve experienced this firsthand," Mickelsen wrote in her op-ed. "For honestly discussing real issues relating to immigration policy — recognizing both the need for border security and the reality that critical aspects of our economy depend on foreign workers — I’ve become the target of intimidation tactics designed to silence me."

On his social media channels, Spoon has repeatedly targeted Mickelsen over her comments about the outsized role undocumented labor plays in the American economy. He's also amplified content from an account called "Stop Idaho RINOs" [Republicans In Name Only] including a floor speech in which she cautioned her fellow Republicans against immigration measures that could harm the Gem State's economy. Newsweek also reported that a University of Idaho study found that roughly 35,000 undocumented immigrants work in Idaho's agriculture, hospitality and construction industries.

"If you guys think that you haven't been touched by an illegal immigrants' hands in some way, either your traveling or your food, you are kidding yourselves,' she said earlier this month.

Reprinted with permission from Alternet.

ICE officer, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement

ICE Guards ’Systematically” Commit Sexual Assaults On Prisoners, Say Lawyers

Reprinted with permission from ProPublica

Guards in an immigrant detention center in El Paso sexually assaulted and harassed inmates in a “pattern and practice" of abuse, according to a complaint filed by a Texas advocacy group urging the local district attorney and federal prosecutors to conduct a criminal investigation.

The allegations, detailed in a filing first obtained by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune, maintain that guards systematically assaulted at least three people in a facility overseen by Immigration and Customs Enforcement — often in areas of the detention center not visible to security cameras. The guards told victims that no one would believe them because footage did not exist and the harassment involved officers as high-ranking as a lieutenant.

Read NowShow less
Border Surge Could Be Windfall For Senate Candidate’s Air Charter Firm

Border Surge Could Be Windfall For Senate Candidate’s Air Charter Firm

By Joseph Tanfani, Tribune Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — As a Republican candidate for U.S. Senate in New Mexico, retired Marine Col. Allen Weh says it’s time for tougher border security.

As a businessman, Weh stands to benefit from the border crisis. His air charter company, CSI Aviation Inc., is the largest private contractor for ICE Air, the aviation wing of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, winning more than $560 million in ICE contracts since 2010.

President Barack Obama is seeking $3.7 billion from Congress to help stem the surge of young immigrants from Central America crossing the Southwest border. The proposal includes $116 million for transportation, and a good portion of that is likely to go to CSI.

Weh’s company is one of many that could profit if Congress approves Obama’s plan. They are at the intersection of the highly charged politics of immigration and the economic realities of government contracting.

The Department of Health and Human Services, which would get $1.8 billion from the plan, is already soliciting proposals for a $350 million contract to provide more shelter space for the children and teenagers.

ICE would get $1.1 billion, including $879 million to add detention facilities for adults with children. About half of ICE detention beds are now provided by private companies, but an ICE spokeswoman said she could not give a breakdown of the proposed new spending.

More than $433 million would go to Customs and Border Protection, including $39 million for added surveillance of smuggling routes and remote stretches of the border by drones. The money would pay for 16 more crews to maintain and fly the agency’s fleet of Predator B drones, and 16,526 additional hours in the air.

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems Inc., based in Poway, Calif., has won more than $112 million in Border Patrol contracts since 2010 to maintain the drones, train staff, and provide technicians who operate airborne sensors that detect human heat signatures.

About $64 million will go to the Justice Department for more immigration judges and legal programs, an effort to ease the backlog of about 360,000 cases in immigration courts. The money includes $15 million to hire lawyers for the juveniles in court proceedings.

“They’re children,” said Alison Posner, director of advocacy for the Catholic Legal Immigration Network. “Where are they going to get the money for a retainer to pay an attorney?”

The plan also sets aside $5 million for the State Department to develop bus placards, highway billboards, and radio, and TV spots in Central America aimed at discouraging parents from sending their children north. Contractors normally provide information services.

“Doing nothing is not an option,” Jeh Johnson, secretary of Homeland Security, told the Senate Appropriations Committee on Thursday.

He said the surge in immigrants had drained budgets, driving up overtime, detention, and transportation costs. At this rate, he said, ICE will run out of money in mid-August and Customs and Border Protection will do so in mid-September.

If Congress doesn’t approve Obama’s emergency spending request, Johnson warned, “we will have to go to a harsh form of reprogramming that will take money away from some vital Homeland Security programs I am sure members of this committee care a lot about.”

Obama has emphasized that he wants to speed up deportations of some of the 57,000 unaccompanied children and teenagers who have been apprehended at the Southwest border since October. Officials said Thursday that they expected 90,000 minors to arrive by the end of September.

ICE charter flights are likely to boom as a result.

Most of the minors have come from Honduras, El Salvador, and Guatemala, and they “must be flown back to their countries,” Sen. Thomas R. Carper (D-DE), chairman of the Senate Homeland Security Committee, told a hearing Wednesday.

Thomas Winkowski, principal deputy assistant secretary of ICE, told the same hearing that his agency had “leased additional charter planes” to fly some of the minors to temporary shelters run by the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement in several states.

Weh’s company has worked for ICE since 2006, and runs flights for ICE Air Operations from 26 cities, with hubs in Mesa, Ariz.; Alexandria, La.; San Antonio; and Miami. Last fiscal year, ICE Air made 2,256 flights to 16 countries, moving 257,000 people — including 189,000 deportations and other removals.

CSI Aviation doesn’t own the aircraft, but charters them from other companies. The Albuquerque-based firm also handles work for other federal agencies, including the Bureau of Prisons and the U.S. Marshals Service, but the deal with ICE is by far its largest federal contract, records show.

Weh, former state Republican chairman in New Mexico, won the GOP primary last month and will face the Democratic incumbent, Sen. Tom Udall, in November.

Weh did not respond to requests for an interview. A CSI Aviation spokeswoman referred questions to ICE. An ICE spokesman, Bryan Cox, said the contract with CSI allowed the agency to obtain planes for its international flight network.

Brian Bennett in the Washington bureau contributed to this report.

Photo: Steve Hillibrand via WikiCommons

Interested in U.S. politics? Sign up for our daily email newsletter!

Shop our Store

Headlines

Editor's Blog

Corona Virus

Trending

World