Overview:
The Trump administration's immigration enforcement claims are not supported by data, with TRAC showing only 76,212 arrests and 72,179 deportations during the first 98 days of his presidency, compared to his claims of 151,000 arrests and 135,000 deportations. The administration's focus is increasingly punitive and political, with law-abiding residents being used as political pawns, and public messaging has grown more aggressive. The Trump administration's immigration spin is more about headlines than results, and independent data and persistent scrutiny are more crucial than ever.
By Felicia J. Persaud
In the current political landscape, immigration remains a hot-button issue, and no one exploits it quite like Donald Trump. Back in the White House, Trump has once again made bold claims about his administrationโs immigration enforcement achievements. But the latest data from the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC), exposes a stark disconnect between the Trump administrationโs rhetoric and the actual numbers.
In an April 28, 2025, press release celebrating its first 100 days, the Trump administration claimed to have already โsurpassed the entirety of Fiscal Year 2024โ in immigration enforcement, citing over 151,000 arrests and 135,000 deportations. However, TRACโs independently verified figures tell a much different story.
Letโs start with deportations. According to ICEโs semi-monthly detention statistics, which TRAC meticulously tracks, the actual number of removals under Trump during his first 98 days โ from January 26 to May 3, 2025 โ was just 72,179. Thatโs nearly half the 135,000 removals Trump claimed. In contrast, the Joe Biden administration recorded 271,484 removals in the entirety of Fiscal Year 2024. To put it plainly, Bidenโs deportation numbers were nearly four times higher than Trumpโs in the comparable time frame.
On arrests, which the administration referred to as โbook-ins,โ the Trump administration reported 151,000 arrests during the same 100-day period. Yet, TRAC data shows only 76,212 arrests, just over half the claimed number. These exaggerations are not minor errors; they are calculated misrepresentations.
When examining daily averages โ a more accurate measure across different time frames โ the picture remains consistent. Under Biden, there were an average of 742 deportations and 759 arrests per day in FY 2024. Trumpโs current averages are 737 deportations and 778 arrests per day. That amounts to just a 1% decrease in deportations and a modest 2% increase in arrests under Trump compared to Biden. Not quite the โskyrocketingโ figures the administration touts.
Moreover, the administration has taken steps to obscure these realities. The Department of Homeland Securityโs Office of Homeland Security Statistics (OHSS), has failed to publish updated enforcement data since November 2024, a troubling breach of transparency. It wasnโt until after the fanfare of Trumpโs โ100-day achievementsโ that ICE quietly released delayed data. TRAC noted that the reports were posted late on a Friday and the following Monday, likely to minimize public scrutiny.
Beyond the numbers, the Trump administrationโs focus appears increasingly punitive and political. Immigrants who are complying with legal procedures โ attending scheduled ICE check-ins, applying for green cards, or pursuing citizenship โ have reported being ambushed and detained. Foreign students have found themselves targeted for expressing dissenting views. These are not the hardened criminals Trump claims to be removing. They are law-abiding residents being used as political pawns.
Meanwhile, public messaging has grown more aggressive. The administration now uses scare tactics, urging undocumented immigrants to self-deport to avoid being forcefully removed. Yet, despite military involvement and redeployment of agency staff, Trumpโs actual enforcement numbers fail to match his bluster.
This glaring gap between words and actions underlines a fundamental truth: the Trump administrationโs immigration spin is more about headlines than results. In the face of misleading narratives, the role of independent data and persistent scrutiny is more crucial than ever. Americans deserve an immigration policy grounded in truth, not theatrics.
This post appeared first on New York Amsterdam News.
The post Fact vs. Fiction and the Trump Immigration Data appeared first on Word In Black.
The post {{post title}}, https://wordinblack.com/2025/05/fact-vs-fiction-and-the-trump-immigration-data/ appeared first on Word in Black.ย
