Daily Border Links: November 8, 2024
This is the final Daily Border Links post. Thank you for reading and sharing these as our year-long ârapid responseâ effort shifts down. The archive will remain online.
WOLA will continue to produce Weekly Border Updates, as we have for over four years, and we will continue to send them to the mailing list that you can join here.
For daily updates about migration, see the National Immigration Forumâs Forum Daily newsletter, and Mary Turckâs Immigration News site.
Developments
On November 6, a Donald Trump spokesperson told Fox News that the president-elect has a mandate to fulfill his campaign promises, including âon day one, launching the largest mass deportation operation of illegal immigrants.â The next day, Trump told NBC News, âItâs not a question of a price tag. Itâs notâreally, we have no choiceâ but to massively deport people.
Ryan King, âTrump Confirms Border Control Among First Priorities â as He Says âNo Choiceâ but to Carry Out Mass Deportationsâ (The New York Post, November 7, 2024).
âTrump: Frontera Sera una Prioridad y No Es âUna Cuestion de Precioââ (EFE, Milenio (Mexico), November 7, 2024).
A Reuters/Ipsos online poll taken after Trumpâs election victory found that during Trumpâs first 100 days in office, â25% of respondents said he should prioritize immigration, a much larger share than any other issue.â
Jason Lange, âAmericans See Immigration as Top Issue for Trump to Tackle, Reuters/Ipsos Poll Findsâ (Reuters, msn.com, November 7, 2024).
Quiet preparations to implement âmass deportationâ are now âramping upâ to full-scale planning, CNN reported. Advisers are discussing priority targeting of undocumented migrants with criminal records while they debate the next steps for âdreamers,â undocumented people who were brought to the United States as children. Slate pointed out that the deportation plan may count on the participation of local police departments nationwide.
Private security contractors that run prisons and detention centers are ramping up their own planning, CNN added. The stock prices of private detention companies like CoreCivic and Geo Group soared following Trumpâs election. GEO Groupâs board chair said his company was âwell-positionedâ to go from its present allotment of 13,500 Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention beds to âover 31,000 beds.â But the incoming administration wonât immediately have the money to pay them unless it resorts to emergency authorities.
Alayna Treene, Priscilla Alvarez, âTrump Allies, Private Sector Quietly Prepare for Mass Detention of Immigrantsâ (CNN, November 7, 2024).
Henry Grabar, âTrumpâs Plan to Use Local Cops to Get the Mass Deportation Machine Goingâ (Slate, November 7, 2024).
Matt Shuham, âPrivate Prison Companies Call Trumpâs Deportation Plans âUnprecedented Opportunityââ (The Huffington Post, November 7, 2024).
Christiaan Hetzner, âTrumpâs Election Win Sends Private Prisons Stocks Soaring as Investors Anticipate Hard Crackdown on Migrationâ (Fortune, Yahoo, November 7, 2024).
Unnamed Border Patrol agents shared their ecstatic response to Trumpâs election with the Washington Examinerâs Anna Giaritelli.
Anna Giaritelli, âBorder Patrol Agents Ecstatic Over Trump 2024 Win: âWe Have Hopeââ (The Washington Examiner, November 7, 2024).
A federal district court judge has struck down the Biden administrationâs âKeeping Families Togetherâ program, which sought to use humanitarian parole authority to allow hundreds of thousands of undocumented spouses of U.S. citizens to remain in the United States. Judge J. Campbell Barker, a Trump appointee, determined that the presidential parole authority for migrants, which dates back to 1952, does not empower a president to parole people already inside the United States. The administration is unlikely to appeal, since the incoming Trump administration opposes the program and will not defend it.
Camilo Montoya-Galvez, âJudge Declares Biden Immigration Program for Spouses of U.S. Citizens Illegalâ (CBS News, November 7, 2024).
Analyses and Feature Stories
If Donald Trump acts after taking office to cut off legal migration pathways like asylum and the CBP One appointments program, migrants are certain to turn to smugglers and seek to enter the United States through other, more dangerous, means, experts and advocates told Associated Press reporters in Mexico. Shelter directors in Mexico, meanwhile, say that they have heard of no Mexican government plans to receive a large number of U.S. deportees.
On a visit to the capital of Mexicoâs Chiapas state last week, Gretchen Kuhner of the Mexico-based Institute for Women in Migration saw migrants âgetting their cellphones charged every day at some makeshift place on the street so they can check their CBP One appointments⊠while theyâre breastfeeding and sleeping in a tent without any water.â
Christopher Sherman, Fernanda Pesce, Maria Verza, âTrump Victory Spurs Worry Among Migrants Abroad, but Itâs Not Expected to Halt Migrationâ (Associated Press, Associated Press, November 8, 2024).
In a Mother Jones listing of likely Trump policies, Isabela Dias warned of âindiscriminate workplace raids, massive detention camps, and around-the-clock deportation flights.â
Dias and NPRâs Sergio MartĂnez-BeltrĂĄn spoke to immigrant rights defenders who plan to use litigation and other tools to seek to block or at least slow Trumpâs planned closures of legal immigration pathways.
Gustavo Torres of CASA told NPR that his organizationâs corps of activists âare expressing disappointment in the Democratic Partyâs strategy and policy on immigration and that the Harris campaign failed to articulate or promote clear immigration or border policies such as pathways to citizenship. When the issue came up during the race, Harris would criticize Trump for scuttling a bipartisan border bill.â
Isabela Dias, âHow Trump Plans to Upend Immigrationâ (Mother Jones, November 7, 2024).
Sergio Martinez-Beltran, âImmigrant Rights Groups Ready to Challenge President-Elect Trumpâs Policiesâ (NPR, November 7, 2024).
At the Intercept, AĂda ChĂĄvez pointed out that Vice President Kamala Harris and the Democratic Party have ânothing to showâ for their rightward shift on border and immigration policy during the 2024 campaign and the latter part of the Biden presidency.
Aida Chavez, âHarris Ran to Trumpâs Right on Immigration â and Gained Absolutely Nothing for Itâ (The Intercept, November 7, 2024).
Several analyses examined the impact that a second Trump administration may have along different parts of the border.
La Verdad de JuĂĄrez reported that Mexican border cities like Ciudad JuĂĄrez should prepare for a âboomâ of migrants trying to reach U.S. soil before Inauguration Day, January 20. That cityâs âSomos Uno Por Juarezâ shelter network is currently at 45 percent capacity, but that could increase. Analysts foresee more migrants turning to smugglers, taking dangerous routes to avoid detection.
Migrants awaiting CBP One appointments in Ciudad JuĂĄrez told Border Report of their fear that the CBP One program will soon disappear, and the odds of winning cases will plummet for those who manage to apply for asylum.
Raul Flores, âCon el Triunfo de Trump en ee.uu. ÂżQue se Espera para la Frontera Norte de Mexico?â (La Verdad (Ciudad Juarez Mexico), November 7, 2024).
Julian Resendiz, âMigrants Worry Trump Will Do Away With Asylum Appointments at Ports of Entryâ (Border Report, November 7, 2024).
In Mexicoâs southern state of Veracruz, through which many migrants pass while traveling between the Mexico-Guatemala border and Mexico City, state officials expect an increase in the number of people passing through between now and Inauguration Day, Milenio reported.
Isabel Zamudio, âVeracruz Anticipa Aumento en el Flujo Migrante por Caravanas Hacia Euâ (Milenio (Mexico), November 7, 2024).
Officials in Baja California, Mexico, told Border Report that they, too, expect an increase in migration ahead of Inauguration Day. Shelters are currently at 60 percent capacity in Tijuana and 70 percent in Mexicali.
Salvador Rivera, âBaja Officials Brace for âElevatedâ Deportations Under Trumpâ (Border Report, November 7, 2024).
In California, the state with the largest undocumented migrant population, Wendy Fry reported at CalMatters, non-profits are bracing for the humanitarian impact of Trumpâs policies and preparing to oppose them using tools like litigation.
Wendy Fry, âTrumpâs Deportation Plan Brings Fear and Sadness at Californiaâs Borderâ (CalMatters, November 7, 2024).
Searchlight New Mexico voiced concerns that the coming crackdown is likely to increase fear in immigrant communities, deterring crime reporting, healthcare access, and social service use, while raids may increase the separation of children from undocumented parents. The publication foresees a further increase in migrants dying in New Mexicoâs deserts as they seek to avoid apprehension. The article further notes notoriously grim conditions at the stateâs ICE detention centers, like Otero and Torrance.
Molly Montgomery, âDonald Trumpâs Victory Puts All Eyes Back on the Borderâ (Searchlight New Mexico, November 7, 2024).
In Texas, migrant rights defenders are bracing themselves, the Texas Observer reported. âTexas is definitely going to be on the front lines of a mass deportation operation,â said Daniel Hatoum of the Texas Civil Rights Project.
Francesca Dâannunzio, âTexas Will Be on the âFront Linesâ of Mass Deportationâ (The Texas Observer, November 7, 2024).
Donald Trumpâs election victory in south Texasâs majority Mexican-American border countiesâa solidly Democratic stronghold as recently as 2016âis âthe starkest example of what has been a broad national embrace of the Republican candidate among Hispanic and working-class voters,â according to a New York Times analysis. Voters were concerned about inflation and what they perceived as uncontrolled immigration. The Associated Press reported on the same phenomenon from Starr, one of the south Texas counties that ended a long streak of voting for Democratic presidential candidates.
Edgar Sandoval, J. David Goodman, Robert Gebeloff, âTrump Flipped Hispanic South Texasâ (The New York Times, November 7, 2024).
Nadia Lathan, Valerie Gonzalez, âA Texas Border County Backed Democrats for Generations. Trump Won It Decisivelyâ (Associated Press, Associated Press, November 7, 2024).
The Economist recalled Trumpâs threats to slap tariffs on Mexican goods if, in his view, the Mexican government is not doing enough to block U.S.-bound migration and accept U.S. deporteesâincluding an agreement to be a âsafe third countryâ for other nationsâ asylum seekers, a status that Mexico has resisted.
âDonald Trump Is Poised to Smash Mexico With Tariffsâ (The Economist (Uk), November 7, 2024).
Todd Bensman, âEven Before Taking Office, Trump Puts Mexico on Spot â Stop the Caravans Nowâ (The New York Post, November 7, 2024).










