By Naveen Athrappully
Border Patrol released no illegal immigrants into the country in May, a âstaggering dropâ from the more than 62,000 illegal immigrants whom Border Patrol was âforced to release along the southwest borderâ during the same period in 2024, Customs and Border Protection (CBP) said in a June 17 statement.
Border Patrol encountered just 8,725 illegal immigrants crossing the southwest border in May, down from 117,905 illegal immigrants encountered in May 2024.
âUnder the leadership of this administration, CBP has received historic support resulting in another 93 percent decrease in illegal crossings along the southwest border this month when compared with last year,â acting CBP Commissioner Pete Flores said.
âBorder numbers continue to trend at historic lows, reinforcing the sustained success of our enforcement efforts in securing the homeland and protecting American communities.â
CBPâs total nationwide encounters, including at ports of entry, averaged roughly 952 per day in May, which is the âsecond lowest average daily number of CBP encounters in history,â according to the agency.
Drug seizures were up in May, with 19 percent more cocaine and 191 percent more heroin seized last month than in April.
In a June 18 post on social media platform X, border czar Tom Homan praised the Trump administration for bringing down the number of illegal immigrants released into the United States.
He said Border Patrol had encountered only 95 illegal aliens along the entire southern border in the past 24 hours, the âlowest number ever recorded.â
âCompare that to the Biden Administration who surpassed more than 10,000 per day,â he said.
âTo continue this great work and make it more permanent, we need the Big Beautiful Bill passed so we can finish the job, to include the biggest deportation operation the American people voted for. God bless the men and women of CBP and Immigration and Customs Enforcement. President Trump is the Game Changer.â
The Republican-backed âOne Big Beautiful Bill Actâ includes several provisions to boost border security and strengthen immigration processes.
This includes $50 billion in funding to renew the construction of the southern border wall and $4 billion to onboard 5,000 new customs officers and 3,000 new Border Patrol agents.
The bill was passed narrowly in the House of Representatives by a vote of 215â214. It now needs to be passed by the Senate before President Donald Trumpâs final approval.
Tackling Illegal Immigration
Since assuming office, Trump has taken several steps to tackle the illegal immigration crisis.
The president has signed orders to end the catch-and-release of illegal immigrants and refugee resettlement and build a border wall. He declared a national emergency, allowing the military and National Guard personnel to build barriers and complete the wall along the United Statesâ border with Mexico.
On April 11, Trump issued a memorandum authorizing the military to take control of a strip of land along the southern border to counter illegal immigration.
âOur southern border is under attack from a variety of threats,â Trump wrote in the memo. âThe complexity of the current situation requires that our military take a more direct role in securing our southern border than in the recent past.â
The presidentâs move to tackle illegal immigration has faced opposition. Since earlier in June, Los Angeles and other places in Southern California have seen multiple protests against the administrationâs immigration policies. Some of these protests have devolved into riots.
In a June 16 X post, California Gov. Gavin Newsom accused Trump of seeking to trigger violence to gain power. Newsomâs statement came after Trump ordered Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers to do âall in their powerâ to deliver the âsingle largest Mass Deportation Program in History.â
âHis plan is clear: Incite violence and chaos in blue states, have an excuse to militarize our cities, demonize his opponents, keep breaking the law, and consolidate power,â Newsom said. âItâs illegal and we will not let it stand.â
On June 17, the Pentagon said it will deploy up to 700 military personnel in Florida, Louisiana, and Texas to assist the states with immigration, in support of the presidentâs call to expand the mass deportation of illegal immigrants.