Texas Offers Border Land for Donald Trump’s Mass Deportation Plan
Migrants on the southern border of the United States, 2024. X/ @AltomonteEvile
November 21, 2024 Hour: 6:58 am
Texas Land Commisioner Buckingham is “100 percent on board” with the president-elect’s promise on mass deportation.
Texas Land Commissioner Dawn Buckingham is offering 1,402 acres of land along the southern border with Mexico for the mass deportation operation planned by the incoming Donald Trump administration.
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Buckingham said in a letter to Trump that she’s offering the land “to be used to construct deportation facilities,” ABC News reported.
“My office is fully prepared to enter into an agreement with the Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or the United States Border Patrol to allow a facility to be built for the processing, detention, and coordination of the largest deportation of violent criminals in the nation’s history,” Buckingham wrote in the letter dated Tuesday.
The Texas General Land Office purchased the plot of land from a farmer in Starr County, about 35 miles west of McAllen in southern Texas in October. In an interview with Fox News, Buckingham said she is “100 percent on board” with the president-elect’s promise on mass deportation.
“Now it’s essentially farmland, so it’s flat, it’s easy to build on. We can very easily put a detention center on there — a holding place as we get these criminals out of our country,” she told Fox News.
In comparison, Democratic governors of California and Arizona, two other states bordering Mexico, reportedly have pledged not to aid the Trump administration’s mass deportation plans.
On Monday, Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs told ABC News Live that she would not use state police or the National Guard to help with mass deportation. Trump confirmed he would declare a national emergency to launch his mass deportation plans as soon as he enters office in January.
His vow to carry out mass deportations is certain to encounter logistical and legal challenges, like the ones that stifled promises from his first campaign once he assumed office, said a report from The Texas Tribune.
teleSUR/ JF Source: Xinhua