Trump has
promised mass deportations. Can he do it in his 2nd term as president?
Jeanine
Santucci USA TODAY
Former
President Donald Trump's comeback victory and potential control of Congress may
put him in the position to deliver on a campaign pledge to conduct a "mass
deportation" of millions of immigrants living in the U.S. without
authorization.
Trump's
first term as president was punctuated by anti-immigrant rhetoric and legal
maneuvers to crack down on immigration. A similar promise made in his first
administration to deport people at a large scale didn't happen because of legal
obstacles. Experts say this time could be different.
Trump and
the Republican Party in its platform said as president this time he would usher
in the "largest deportation program in American history."
During his
campaign, Trump and his surrogates amplified examples of undocumented
immigrants accused of committing violent crimes, and promoted widely debunked
claims about Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, eating pets.
"We're
going to have the largest deportation in the history of our country and we're
going to start with Springfield and Aurora," Trump said at a news
conference earlier this year. Many immigrants in Springfield have temporary
legal status, but Trump has promised to revoke their permission to stay in the
country.
Here's what
we know about the president-elect's deportation plans:
What has
Trump said about mass deportation?
During his
campaign, Trump did not release detailed plans on how he would deport the
estimated 11 million immigrants living in the U.S. illegally. But he offered a
glimpse into what he might do in campaign speeches and in comments made by his
advisers.
“President
Trump will restore his effective immigration policies, implement brand new
crackdowns that will send shockwaves to all the world’s criminal smugglers, and
marshal every federal and state power necessary to institute the largest
deportation operation of illegal criminals, drug dealers, and human traffickers
in American history,” Trump's national campaign press secretary, Karoline
Leavitt, said.
Former
administration officials have told USA TODAY that a mass deportation effort
would need to include the help of the U.S. military, local governments and
private companies that contract with the government.
“If I
thought things were getting out of control, I would have no problem using the
military,” he said in an interview with TIME earlier this year.
Trump's
campaign website also said he would "deport pro-Hamas radicals and make
our college campuses safe and patriotic again."
Though a
scale-up of deportation actions would surely meet resistance in the courts from
immigration and civil rights advocacy groups, Trump could face fewer legal
obstacles than he did in his first term. He appointed hundreds of judges to
courts that previously hindered his attempts.
WHO WOULD
TRUMP DEPORT?: Millions of immigrants are in the U.S. unauthorized. Who would
Trump prioritize for removal?
How much
could it cost?
Vice
President-elect JD Vance has estimated Trump's actions could result in 1
million people being removed from the country each year, a pace the nonpartisan
American Immigration Council estimated would cost about $88 billion annually.
To deport all the people in the U.S. without authorization would take about a
decade and cost nearly a trillion dollars, the council said.
It could be
big business for private companies that contract with the government to help
detain migrants. Private contracts already exist for nearly every step of the
deportation process, including facilities housing people in detention,
transportation – including private flights to deport someone to their home
country – and security.
Congress
currently funds Immigration and Customs Enforcement to hold 41,500 people in
detention each day, a number that peaked at about 55,000 during Trump's first
term. The American Immigration Council estimates that deporting 1 million
people per year would require that capacity to increase by a factor of 24.
BIG BUCKS IN
DEPORTATION PLAN: A cost to taxpayers, billions for big business from Trump's
deportation promises
Contributing:
Nick Penzenstadler, Lauren Villagran, Bart Jansen and Aysha Bagchi, USA TODAY;
Reuters
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