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Friday December 20, 2024

US records decade-high deportations under Biden's watch

President Biden took office pledging to ease immigration policies, but gradually toughened enforcement approach

By Reuters & Web Desk
December 20, 2024
US President Joe Biden delivers remarks after touring the General Motors Factory ZERO electric vehicle assembly plant in Detroit, Michigan, US, November 17, 2021. — Reuters
US President Joe Biden delivers remarks after touring the General Motors 'Factory ZERO' electric vehicle assembly plant in Detroit, Michigan, US, November 17, 2021. — Reuters

A United States government report released on Thursday revealed that deportations of immigrants in the United States reached their highest level in the past year since 2014 part of a broader push by outgoing President Joe Biden to reduce illegal immigration.

According to the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement's (ICE) annual enforcement report, the agency deported approximately 271,000 immigrants to 192 countries in fiscal year 2024, which concluded on September 30.

This figure surpasses the deportation numbers during any year of President-elect Donald Trump's 2017-2021 administration and marks the highest tally since President Joe Biden took office in 2021, US government statistics showed.

Initially when the Democratic president took office, he had aimed to reverse Trump's stringent immigration policies but faced challenges with rising illegal immigration.

As a result, his administration gradually toughened his enforcement measures.

Trump, a Republican, won another term in the White House in November promising to deport record numbers of immigrants in the US illegally as part of a broader immigration crackdown.

Trump transition spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said in a statement that Biden's deportations were insignificant compared to the high levels of illegal immigration during his presidency.

"On day one, President Trump will fix the immigration and national security nightmare that Joe Biden created by launching the largest mass deportation operation of illegal criminals in United States history," she said.

Some 11 million immigrants lacked legal status or had temporary protections in 2022, according to government and think-tank estimates, a figure that some analysts now place at 13 million-14 million.

The incoming Trump administration plans to tap resources across the federal government to power the planned deportation initiative, Reuters reported last month.

Trump tried to increase deportations during his first term with limited success. ICE removed 267,000 immigrants in fiscal year 2019, fewer than most years under Trump's Democratic predecessor, Barack Obama.

When looking at both deportations by ICE and returns to Mexico by US border authorities, Biden had more in fiscal 2023 than any Trump year.

While deportations rose in fiscal year 2024, the number of ICE arrests of immigrants living in the US illegally dropped by 33% compared with the previous year, the agency's annual report said, attributing the falloff to more officers assisting with border security operations.