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The White House is in turmoil over allegations that Donald Trump is stepping back from his key election promise of widespread deportations, following his commitment to “de-escalate” in Minnesota.
Trump is encountering a strong backlash from his dedicated MAGA supporters, who are worried that the most extensive deportation initiative in U.S. history could collapse imminently.
Abigail Jackson, a spokeswoman for the White House, responded assertively to accusations that Border Czar Tom Homan was yielding to left-wing demonstrators after engaging in discussions with Democratic leaders, including Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey.
“Tom Homan is a patriot with a wealth of experience in effectively safeguarding American communities and deporting criminal illegal immigrants,” Jackson stated in an interview with the Daily Mail.
“Any leftist agitator or criminal illegal immigrant who believes Tom’s involvement signifies a win for their agenda is gravely mistaken. The Trump Administration remains steadfast in its commitment to law and order and safeguarding the American populace,” she asserted.
Homan’s arrival is a relief to rank-and-file ICE agents who increasingly see Kristi Noem as a haphazard leader. But there’s now a palpable fear among Trump’s most fervent supporters that the leadership swap signals a softer strategy is underway.
Homan’s top priority, according to sources, will be coordinating negotiations between Minnesota Democratic state leaders and the White House in the wake of an agent’s killing of ICU nurse Alex Pretti on Saturday.
Immigration hardliners warn that any deal by Homan that leads ICE agents to scale back their presence in Minnesota will be seen as a collapse of Trump’s mass deportation agenda and a win for liberal protesters.
President Donald Trump arrives to speak about the economy at a rally Tuesday, in Clive, Iowa
Protesters clash with law enforcement while holding a ‘noise demonstration’ outside of a hotel believed to be housing federal immigration agents near Minneapolis, on Monday
Protesters outside a hotel believed to be where ICE agents are staying in Minneapolis on Sunday
Homan’s top priority, according to sources, will be coordinating negotiations between MinnesotaDemocratic state leaders and the White House in the wake of an agent’s killing of ICU nurse Alex Pretti (pictured) on Saturday
These concerns come after Trump said in a Fox News interview on Tuesday that Homeland Security would ‘de-escalate a little bit’ in Minneapolis.
Mike Howell, president of the Oversight Project and a longtime ally of Homan, is praying that his friend won’t strike any deal with the Democrats who run the state.
Rather, he said, Homan should hold the line and even surge more forces into the Twin Cities to avoid handing protesters a victory that could spell the end of the movement.
‘The mass deportation agenda could be completely wound back within the next 24 hours,’ Howell told the Daily Mail on Tuesday.
Homan’s strategy during his negotiations with Democratic leaders remains unclear, with the ultimate decision left to Trump.
A source close to the White House warned that if Trump blinks on mass deportations it would be the ‘biggest betrayal’ of Republican voters since George H.W. Bush broke his no-new-taxes promise and watched his presidency unravel in 1993.
‘If Trump backs down on deportations, he might as well pack it in. It will be the biggest betrayal to the base since George HW Bush raised taxes,’ the White House insider told the Daily Mail.
Howell agrees adding, ‘This is a pivotal moment that will determine immigration enforcement operations for the years to come. If a rioters’ veto is allowed to limit or redirect immigration enforcement operations, then the administration has lost control of the mass deportation agenda.’
Noem and her close allies on the ground were sidelined in Minneapolis following the outrage over the weekend shooting of Alex Pretti
Protesters across the Twin Cities have actively hampered ICE efforts after the death of Renee Good, a 37-year-old mother of three fatally shot by an ICE agent during federal enforcement operations in Minneapolis on January 7.
Trump told reporters on the White House lawn that he was not backing off from his agenda, and blamed Democratic leaders for flooding the cities with illegals.
However, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has now sent controversial Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino, a close Noem ally, back home to California as Homan prepares to take control of the operation.
Conservative influencers supportive of mass deportation criticized DHS leaders for abandoning Bovino following the deadly shootings.
Nick Sortor, a conservative media personality famous for filming viral moments of protesters fighting with immigration agents, claimed in a Tuesday interview that border patrol agents have been ordered not to arrest ‘non-criminal’ undocumented immigrants.
Sortor pointed to complaints from border agents left behind in Minnesota after the exile of Bovino, saying they were told to stand down even when a license plate showed a person was in the country illegally. Bovino left Minnesota on Monday with a handful of close Border Patrol allies.
Howell told the Daily Mail he was concerned to see Bovino and some of his agents withdrawn from Minneapolis because it will benefit Democratic leaders like Gov. Walz and Mayor Frey.
‘Any time you’re removing resources from an area like that, it appears to be a negotiating tactic with Frey and Walz, and I don’t know why we’re negotiating with people behind the violent riots against the US government.’
Immigration hardliners are warning Trump’s Border Czar Tom Homan not to back in Minnesota as fears grow the largest mass deportation effort in U.S. history could unravel within the next 24 hours
Border Patrol chief Gregory Bovino observes a protest in Minneapolis on January 15
Howell advised the White House that it is time to double down on deportations by making it completely unviable for illegal aliens to remain in the United States.
Homan met with Gov. Walz and Mayor Frey on Tuesday to discuss cooperation between federal and local law enforcement.
‘While we don’t agree on everything, these meetings were a productive starting point and I look forward to more conversations with key stakeholders in the days ahead,’ Homan wrote on X.
‘President Trump has been clear: he wants American cities to be safe and secure for law-abiding residents – and they will be.’
The administration failed to meet the President’s promise of deporting one million illegal immigrants during Trump’s first year in office. ICE and Border Patrol deported upwards of 675,000 noncitizens, a DHS end of year tally for 2025 shows.
Trump rode back into the Oval Office a year ago after running his entire 2024 campaign on instituting mass deportations across the country in response to outrage at mass migration at the southern border.
However, a new Daily Mail poll reveals that Trump’s approval ratings have collapsed to record lows, and his signature issue of immigration is now proving to be an albatross around his neck.
Another Daily Mail survey found that American voters are turning on ICE: 53 percent of registered voters think the immigration raids should now end.
Howell is now urging Homan and the White House to not let public perception based on media reports dictate the outcome of the future deportations objectives.
‘They should focus on quantity and not what they think is the best political communications quality,’ he concluded. ‘So that means if you want to deport a high quantity, you go to places where there’s concentrations of illegal aliens, like worksite enforcement.’