Trump to intensify immigration enforcement after inauguration

File photo

Donald Trump's incoming US presidential administration plans to intensify immigration enforcement nationwide soon after he takes office on Monday, Reuters reported.

"We’re going to be doing operations all across the country," the person told Reuters on Friday. "You’re going to see arrests in New York. You’re going to see arrests in Miami."

The source was responding to a Wall Street Journal report that the administration plans to launch a large immigration raid in Chicago on Tuesday.

Citing four people familiar with the planning, the newspaper said the Chicago operation would last all week, with US Immigration and Customs Enforcement sending between 100 and 200 officers to carry out the operation.

The source who spoke with Reuters denied that there was a special effort to move personnel to Chicago.

Trump's transition team did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Immigration was at the center of Trump's campaign in the lead-up to the November 5 presidential election.

"Within moments of my inauguration, we will begin the largest domestic deportation operation in American history," Trump said in January 2024.

Trump is expected to mobilize agencies across the US government to help him deport record numbers of immigrants, Reuters has reported, building on efforts in his first term to tap all available resources and pressure so-called "sanctuary" jurisdictions to cooperate.

More from International

  • Bomb kills at least one person in luxury Moscow apartment

    A bomb tore through the lobby of a luxury apartment block in Moscow on Monday, killing at least one person and injuring four others in an attack targeting a pro-Russian paramilitary leader from eastern Ukraine, the state TASS news agency reported.

  • Car bomb kills 15 in northern Syria

    A car bomb killed at least 15 people in the Syrian city of Manbij on Monday, the second attack there in three days and Syria's deadliest since Bashar al-Assad was toppled from power in December.

  • Trump says Americans may feel pain in trade war

    President Donald Trump said the sweeping tariffs that he has imposed on Mexico, Canada and China may cause "short term" pain for Americans as global markets reflected concerns the levies could undermine growth and reignite inflation.

  • Israeli forces destroy 20 buildings in West Bank refugee camp

    The Israeli military blew up buildings in the Jenin refugee camp in the occupied West Bank on Sunday in an operation that the Palestinian state news agency said leveled around 20 buildings.

  • Rubio tells Panama to end China's influence of canal or face US action

    US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Sunday warned Panama's President Jose Raul Mulino that Washington will "take measures necessary" if Panama does not immediately take steps to end what President Donald Trump sees as China's influence and control over the Panama Canal.