Trump’s New Administration to Begin Crackdown on Illegal Immigration

Wed Jan 08 2025
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Key points

  • Campaign to be launched by Congress against illegal immigration
  • Bill to be a law in the Republican-dominated Senate
  • Tom Homan named by Trump to do the task

WASHINGTON, United States: United States (US) lawmakers voted Tuesday to expand pre-trial incarceration for foreign criminal suspects as a new Congress unified under Republican control works to deliver on Donald Trump’s vow to crack down on illegal immigration.

The Laken Riley Act — which calls for the detention of undocumented immigrants charged with theft-related crimes — is named for a 22-year-old student murdered by a Venezuelan man with no papers who was wanted for shoplifting.

“As promised, we’re starting today with border security. If you polled the populace and voters, they would tell you that was the top of the list,” Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters ahead of the vote in the House of Representatives.

“And we have a lot to do there to fix it — it’s an absolute disaster because of what has happened over the last four years — and the Laken Riley Act is a big part of that.”

Bill against illegal immigrants

The legislation — Congress’s first bill of the new session — already passed the House last year, with Republicans keen to highlight what they described as weak border security policies from President Joe Biden.

And we have a lot to do there to fix it — it’s an absolute disaster because of what has happened over the last four years — and the Laken Riley Act is a big part of that.” — Speaker Mike Johnson.

It was stalled in the Democratic-controlled Senate but is expected to get a vote as soon as Friday in the newly inaugurated upper chamber, which flipped to the Republicans in November’s elections.

The bill will likely need at least eight opposition votes and could face a Democratic blockade, despite being co-sponsored by the party’s centrist Pennsylvania senator, John Fetterman.

A statement from House Minority Whip Katherine Clark’s office accused Republicans of “attempting to use a horrible tragedy for political gain” and said the bill would expand detentions without increasing funding.

In the end, 48 House Democrats voted for the legislation as advanced from the House by 264 votes to 159 — a small increase from when it was last considered.

Trump has promised to crack down on border crossings and carry out mass deportations once he takes office on January 20 and has named Tom Homan, a veteran hardline immigration official, as his “border czar.”

 Laken Riley Act

The president-elect repeatedly spotlighted Laken Riley’s case during his election campaign as he railed against undocumented migrants, blaming them for “poisoning the blood” of the country.

Jose Antonio Ibarra, 26, was convicted of her murder after she was found dead in a wooded area at the University of Georgia in Athens.

“The Laken Riley Act is a direct step toward ensuring that criminal illegal aliens are swiftly and permanently removed from our communities and our country,” said Republican House Whip Tom Emmer.

“This bill is more than just a piece of legislation. It’s a return to common sense American values and, under President Trump’s leadership, there will be a lot more where that came from as we restore the rule of law and put Americans first again.”

Mobilisation of state institutions

Donald Trump is expected to mobilise institutions across the US government to aid him in deporting record numbers of immigrants, delivering on efforts in his first term to use all available resources and pressure so-called “sanctuary” jurisdictions to subdue, according to six former Trump officials and allies, reported Reuters.

In his previous term, Trump imposed a travel ban on seven Muslim countries: Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen.

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