Before leaving for Europe, President Donald Trump emphasized this isn't the first lawsuit filed against *** sanctuary jurisdiction, and it won't be the last. That's going to be *** pretty routine filing with other cities too, as you know, we've started numerous lawsuits with other cities. We want to bring safety. We've got to get the criminals out, and we're doing it in record numbers. We reached out to the Justice Department to see if any other jurors. are under investigation and haven't heard back yet. Like the president, top immigration officials are signaling *** new phase. White House border czar Tom Holman says more ICE agents are being deployed into sanctuary jurisdictions as the immigration battle between the federal government and Democratic states heats up. Earlier this week, 21 Democratic attorneys general sued the Trump administration for an executive order that tries to prevent Undocumented immigrants from social services like Head Start and health clinics. The suit calls the order indefensible. It's creating *** split screen between red and blue states on the issue and cooperating with the federal government. In Florida, Governor Ron DeSantis says deportation flights from Alligator Alcatraz have begun. Critics condemn the immigration detention facility surrounded by pythons and alligators as cruel and inhumane. But the White House has praised it, hoping it acts as *** deterrent for migrants, while the president says he wants to see similar facilities in many other states, and we reached out to several Republican states today who all told us along the lines of they will do what's necessary to cooperate with the federal government on immigration in Washington, Christopher Sala.
ICE has deported nearly 200K people since Trump returned to office, on track for highest level in a decade
Updated: 10:40 AM CDT Aug 28, 2025
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Immigration and Customs Enforcement deported nearly 200,000 people in the first seven months of President Donald Trump’s administration, according to a senior Homeland Security official, putting the federal agency on track for its highest rate of removals in at least a decade but still short of the administration’s stated deportation target.The latest figure is a slice of the overall deportations that have occurred under Trump. The administration has recorded nearly 350,000 deportations since the president returned to office in January. The other deportations this year included repatriations by U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the Coast Guard, as well as people who chose to self-deport.Prior to Trump taking office, ICE had already recorded around 71,400 deportations between October 2024 through the end of December. Including those, ICE could surpass 300,000 deportations in fiscal year 2025, which ends Sept. 30. The last time the agency recorded that many deportations was under President Barack Obama, when around 316,000 people were removed in fiscal year 2014.The administration has enlisted multiple federal agencies to bolster its immigration enforcement operations nationwide, notably flexing its presence in cities like Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.CBP, the agency responsible for border security, recorded more than 132,000 deportations this year. The department has also tracked around 17,500 self-deportations. Taken together with ICE’s actions, that amounts to nearly 350,000 deportations in the first seven months of Trump’s second term.“In the face of a historic number of injunctions from activist judges, ICE, CBP, and the U.S. Coast Guard have made historic progress to carry out President Trump’s promise of arresting and deporting illegal aliens who have invaded our country,” the senior DHS official said in a statement. “Additionally, illegal aliens are hearing our message to leave now or face the consequence.”Privately, however, senior Trump officials remain frustrated with the agency, which continues to lag in immigration arrests. While roughly double what they were under the Biden administration, interior arrests have fluctuated between 1,000 and 2,000 arrests a day, according to internal data, short of a White House goal of 3,000 arrests a day.Trump campaigned on mass deportation — vowing that removing undocumented immigrants would be top priority for his administration, which has set a goal of one million deportations a year. And while the number of deportations so far is a significant increase from recent years, the task of removing people in historic numbers has proven challenging given limited resources and personnel.Now, ICE is preparing to receive a massive infusion of cash, likely supercharging operations. When Trump signed his agenda bill into law over the summer, it set up ICE to be the most well-funded police force in the federal government over the next four years.ICE alone is set to receive nearly $75 billion through 2029, including about $45 billion that is being set aside specifically to increase capacity at immigration detention centers. The other nearly $30 billion is going toward enforcement and removal — a cash windfall that will be directed toward the front-line ICE operations that involve arresting immigrants and transporting them to detention centers.DHS has repeatedly touted its efforts to encourage people to voluntarily leave the country — taking to the airwaves in multimillion-dollar ad campaigns and offering financial incentives. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem touted those figures in a White House Cabinet meeting this week, crediting the president for his “strong message.”
WASHINGTON — Immigration and Customs Enforcement deported nearly 200,000 people in the first seven months of President Donald Trump’s administration, according to a senior Homeland Security official, putting the federal agency on track for its highest rate of removals in at least a decade but still short of the administration’s stated deportation target.
The latest figure is a slice of the overall deportations that have occurred under Trump. The administration has recorded nearly 350,000 deportations since the president returned to office in January. The other deportations this year included repatriations by U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the Coast Guard, as well as people who chose to self-deport.
Prior to Trump taking office, ICE had already recorded around 71,400 deportations between October 2024 through the end of December. Including those, ICE could surpass 300,000 deportations in fiscal year 2025, which ends Sept. 30. The last time the agency recorded that many deportations was , when around 316,000 people were removed in fiscal year 2014.
The administration has enlisted multiple federal agencies to bolster its immigration enforcement operations nationwide, notably flexing its presence in cities like Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.
CBP, the agency responsible for border security, recorded more than 132,000 deportations this year. The department has also tracked around 17,500 self-deportations. Taken together with ICE’s actions, that amounts to nearly 350,000 deportations in the first seven months of Trump’s second term.
“In the face of a historic number of injunctions from activist judges, ICE, CBP, and the U.S. Coast Guard have made historic progress to carry out President Trump’s promise of arresting and deporting illegal aliens who have invaded our country,” the senior DHS official said in a statement. “Additionally, illegal aliens are hearing our message to leave now or face the consequence.”
Privately, however, senior Trump officials remain frustrated with the agency, which continues to lag in immigration arrests. While roughly double what they were under the Biden administration, interior arrests have fluctuated between 1,000 and 2,000 arrests a day, according to internal data, short of a White House goal of 3,000 arrests a day.
Trump campaigned on mass deportation — vowing that removing undocumented immigrants would be top priority for his administration, which has set a goal of one million deportations a year. And while the number of deportations so far is a significant increase from recent years, the task of removing people in historic numbers has proven challenging given limited resources and personnel.
Now, ICE is preparing to receive a massive infusion of cash, likely supercharging operations. When Trump signed his agenda bill into law over the summer, it set up ICE to be the most well-funded police force in the federal government over the next four years.
ICE alone is set to receive nearly $75 billion through 2029, including about $45 billion that is being set aside specifically to increase capacity at immigration detention centers. The other nearly $30 billion is going toward enforcement and removal — a cash windfall that will be directed toward the front-line ICE operations that involve arresting immigrants and transporting them to detention centers.
DHS has repeatedly touted its efforts to encourage people to voluntarily leave the country — taking to the airwaves in multimillion-dollar ad campaigns and offering financial incentives. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem touted those figures in a White House Cabinet meeting this week, crediting the president for his “strong message.”