“The Border Tsar,” Tom Homan of President Donald Trump, is increasingly becoming the efforts for the mass deportation of the White House, as the one -time chief ice is transferred to a more clear political role.
This politicization was full on Saturday night when Homan expressed a speech at the Turning Point USA conference, Trump’s conservative youth group, run by Charlie Kirk, a close ally of President Don Jr.’s son.
Homan Gruff’s characteristic person was completely displayed as Hecler collided with him shortly after he started talking.
“Do you want? Come take some,” Homan said to the Man. “I’m tired of it … Tom Homan doesn’t go anywhere. Tom Homan doesn’t close.
“This man would not know what it was like to serve this nation. This man has no balls to be an ice officer. He has no balls to be an agent of the border patrol,” Homan continued as the crowd cheered him.
Tom Homan takes on a public role as a White House cheerleader (CNN)
As Hecler was accompanying, Homan cracked: “This man lives in his mother’s basement. The only thing that surprised me is … no purple hair and a nose ring.
“Get out of here, you lose.”
Hours later, Homan was the first line of defense of the administration of the Sunday interview administration, where he participated in the damage control in an attempt to return at first glance an apparent but scary recognition: that ICE and other immigration agents were racially profiling people while making large-scale raids in the country.
Earlier, Homan had told Fox News on Friday that ICE agents “do not need probable reason to go to someone, to hold them briefly and question them … based on their physical appearance.”
Without an explanation of what he has in mind by “physical form”, everything, but did not confirm that Homan directs agents to “retain briefly” (or more) people who consider Spanish or Latin American origin. The description corresponds to the case of a textbook of racial profiling.
Speaking on Sunday with Dana Bash on CNN UnionHoman made a face.
“Let me be clear, the physical description cannot be the only factor to give you a reasonable suspicion,” he told CNN.
“Physical description may not be the only reason to retain and question someone. This may not be the only reason for raising reasonable suspicion. This is countless factors.”
He also stressed that “every icy officer goes through the training of the fourth amendment every six months,” citing training designed to lead federal law enforcement officers when it comes to deciding whether to stop “stopping”. But Homan also admitted that Ice did what he called “secured arrests” to American citizens in “many” cases.
The verbal slip of Homan comes when the White House-City official officially title, “King,” dates from an informal term used by presidents dating back to FDR as a clear Trump favorite to protect his mass deportation program in media chains.
This honor puts Homan, at least temporarily, on the spot once occupied by White House adviser Stephen Miller and Christy Nov, who, as the head of the Ministry of Homeland Security, faced questions about the administration’s plans to tingle FEMA, the National Agency for Disaster.
He also comes to a convenient moment for the president, who is watching a great deal of fall between the best members of the team of his ministry of justice because of the political consequences of the continuing secret of Jeffrey Epstein and the powerful figures to which the financier of the billionaire of the pedophile is linked before his death in 2019.
For the “king”, this means defending the most out -of -the -directed aspects of the President’s policies. It is obviously easy to ask for Homan who supports the use of family separation as a deterrent for illegal border crossings even during the Obama administration when he was an executive associate director of ICE for execution and removal operations.
In an interview on Thursday with Politico, Homan played defense on a new aspect of politics: raids on farms that (especially in the West) is a sector of the American economy, which relies to a large extent on seasonal workers, many of whom are without documents.
Homan told Politico that the administration would not provide “amnesty” for unrivaled agricultural workers caught in ice raids to farm communities.
“No one hires an illegal alien from the goodness of his heart,” Homan told the newsletter. “They hire them because they can work more more, to pay them less, and to undercut their competition with US citizens’ employees.
He insisted: “Many, many illegal aliens do not pay taxes. They are paid under the table. Employers do not pay taxes to employees, they do not pay unemployment insurance. So they cheat on the system.”
Despite Homan’s claim, undocumented immigrants make up a considerable part of US federal and state tax bases.
According to the Institute of Economic and Tax Policy, in 40 countries undocumented immigrants make up a larger share of the tax base than the largest 1 percent of households.