The United States immigration authorities deported over 270,000 migrants last financial year, figures showed on Thursday, December 19, 2024.
This comes weeks before U.S. President-elect Donald Trump takes office. Trump has threatened to deport millions of migrants.
The tally of removals is the final annual report under President Joe Biden and is higher than at any time in the last decade – including during Trump’s first term as president.
The bulk of those forced to leave the United States had crossed the southern border illegally, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) said in its report.
Around a third of them had criminal convictions, or were facing criminal charges.
Covering 12 months to the end of September, the period largely coincided with the presidential campaign in which Trump made clamping down on migration a key feature.
He pledged to launch the largest deportation operation in U.S. history when he takes office on January 20.
The promise – which focused heavily on the unsubstantiated claim that migrants commit more crimes than U.S. citizens – proved popular with voters.
Trump has offered few details on how the operation would be carried out, with analysis suggesting it would be costly and impractical with current staffing levels.
“Every year, our workforce faces tremendous challenges – but every year, they meet those challenges head-on,” AFP quoted ICE Deputy Director Patrick Lechleitner as saying.
Illegal crossings surged after Biden took office, though declined sharply over the last year after his administration tightened rules on claiming asylum.
Estimates suggest between 11 and 15 million people live in the United States illegally.
Trump and his supporters insist the number is far higher.
Many of those in the country without authorization work and pay taxes, often performing difficult or dangerous jobs that citizens don’t want to do.
Opponents of Trump’s pledged crackdown said the economy could suffer if he tries to deport illegal migrants on the scale he has suggested and say it would create labour shortages in housing, agriculture and social care.
Economists said any such shortage would push prices up, and undermine one of Trump’s key election promises to reduce inflation.
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