Tom Homan, President Trump’s “border czar,” defended the immigration raids this weekend and pledged to continue working toward carrying out the administration’s enforcement goals in a Monday
Thomas Homan once defended Obama-era policies and health care for transgender immigrants. Now he’s eyeing hotlines to report undocumented neighbors and arrests of local officials who get in the way.
Border czar Tom Homan said Tuesday that ICE agents are already being deployed across the U.S. to engage in a mass deportation operation.
Tom Homan said he is being "realistic" with how many undocumented migrants will be removed from the U.S., citing costs.
Border czar Tom Homan said Monday that he owes “no apologies” for the mass deportation operation undertaken by the Trump
A week into the second Trump administration and the crackdown on the border and illegal immigration is underway. DHS arrested and deported over 7,000 people that were in the U.S. illegally, and some of them were in Arizona.
Heavily armed federal agents swept through the Big Apple early Tuesday for the first deportation raids under President Trump’s crackdown — nabbing violent illegal immigrants including kidnappers
Trump's border czar Tom Homan comments on the state of the border, the need to shut it down, Trump's plans for the southern border, and blue state governors not supporting federal policies on 'Finnerty:' "I've been clear on that.
He ought to stick to the Catholic Church and fix that. That’s a mess,’ Homan said in response to the pope’s recent criticism.
Denver Mayor Mike Johnston on Tuesday decried immigration raids in schools and hospitals. “We don’t want people targeting schools or churches or hospitals,” Johnston told CNN’s Jake Tapper
Federal authorities descended on the Big Apple early Tuesday morning to carry out their first major deportation raids in the city as part of President Trump’s crackdown on illegal immigration.
As he returns to the Oval Office, Donald Trump has promised 'a golden age' after he was 'saved by God to make America great again.' Is his optimism justified?