It didn't take me too long to recognize that Elon Musk's rampage through the federal government was not sustainable and had to come to an end, albeit with great damage. The same applied to the worst of Trump's tariff's -- the markets cracked the whip, and he retreated to tariffs that were merely damaging, rather than ruinous.*
I would like to think that the same rule applies to mass deportations, that deporting so much of our labor force will become so ruinous that it just has to stop. But at the same time, Team Trump has invested so many resources in mass deportation, and Republicans are so committed to it that it seems hard to imagine them pulling back.
The case for pessimism
The One Botched, Bungled Boondoggle increases the budget for border enforcement from $34 billion to $168 billion -- nearly a five-fold increase. This is approximately the combined total of all local police budgets in the US. It also seeks to hire another 10,000 ICE agents, up from the current 20,000 and as much as a 13-fold increase in the detention and surveillance budget. Many of these facilities are already built, so there will not be much delay. And detention and surveillance will be a strong interest group fighting any cuts. Firing tens of thousands of unionized federal employees is not politically feasible (although DOGE has set an interesting precedent here). ICE has tasted blood and will be extremely difficult to reign in. And this seems to be broadly desired by Republicans across the board, being offered as a spoonful of sugar to sweeten the bitter medicine if Medicaid cuts. The only Republican to have questioned the expansion is Rand Paul, whose only objection appears to be a desire for greater accountability for the expense. And when Trump briefly relented for farms and hotels he quickly reversed, apparently in response to Republican outcry.
Opinion polls are also revealing. It appears that Americans believe that ICE has gone too far by 54% to 44%. But 80% of Republicans approve, with 31% even saying that ICE has not gone far enough. So long as 80% of Republicans support ICE brutality, it will be very hard for Republicans to go against it.
In short, Republicans in general and Trump in particular have made mass deportations their signature policy, created a huge bloc of interests in mass deportations, have a rabid base, and will have great difficulty backing down.
The case or optimism
At the same time, sooner or later the economic consequences of deportations on such a scale will make themselves known. At the same time, immigrants make up about 19% of the US labor force. Yes, granted, many of them have legal status, but neither ICE nor hardcore Republicans seem to care. Including undocumented only, Republicans are proposing to deport nearly a third of the workforce in construction, nearly half our workforce in agriculture, nearly a third of home health workers, and perhaps one out of four or five residential care workers. Deporting so much of our workforce is going to be seriously disruptive and lead to growing pushback. Donald Trump is showing signs of wavering, proposing exemptions for workers in agriculture and hospitality, though so far not following through. Immigrant-heavy industries are beginning to experience labor shortages, especially in agriculture.
And now we are getting reports that even ICE is getting tired of this. At least some ICE officers disapprove of their agency's lawlessness, although I think it is obvious that others love it. But it does seem plausible that even agents who like the work are getting tired of starting at 4:00 a.m. and working weekends. And even pushing so hard, ICE is still falling well short of Stephen Miller's goal of 3,000 arrests a day -- an average of 1,200 per day and only two days with 2,000. The latest budget seeks to expand ICE's workforce by half -- from 20,000 to 30,000. It seeks to more than double detainee capacity -- from 41,000 to 100,000. Even with such an expansion, Miller's quota seems like a stretch. At the same time, this has not (thus far) led to widespread resignations or internal protests, and in the absence of such a response, discontent is not much use. But it does suggests that the ICE rank and file might be more open to being reigned in than one might expect -- so long as the pressure from above relents.
What to Expect
Well, Elon Musk got kicked out when the rest of Trump's cabinet revolted. All of them, no matter how rightwing, had actual work to get done and were tired of the disruptions. Is there a chance of that happening here? Other departments are being asked to divert more and more resources to deportations. Some of them must be tired of being diverted from their normal missions. A lot of employers, many of the Republicans, are getting frustrated with labor shortage. And even Homeland Security is offering a sweetener to its threats -- the opportunity for anyone who self-deports to apply for readmission. Tr
Sooner or later -- my guess is about 3-4 months, but that is purely a guess -- labor shortages will get so bad that the Team Trump will see no choice but to relent, at least in agriculture. And if Trump relents in agriculture, how long can it be before other industries want in as well? He has already proposed an exception for hospitality. Construction and healthcare will also want in. And no doubt others. Trump has proposed to allow employers to "vouch" for their workforce to protect them from deportation.** A few points are in order here.
One is that this sounds terribly exploitive. It makes it essentially impossible for a laborer to change jobs without a sponsor's agreement, and it allows employers to hold the threat of deportation over anyone they consider out of line.
At the same time, not all employers are purely exploitive. Many will no doubt be willing to vouch for an employee purely as a protective matter. In fact, I would expect that even if right wingers can eventually be brought around to such a system, they will be absolutely paranoid about fake certifications.
And finally, this will require at least some relenting in ICE's reign of terror. An end to workplace raids at farms, obviously. But ending workplace raids will be of limited value of employees can be arrested any time going to and from work, buying groceries, picking up children from school, attending church, etc. Granted, ICE can continue random sweeps of these place. But it will at least have to give people the opportunity to present proof of protection by an employer, and will have to respect such a certification. That might even mean ending outrageous quotas in favor of a more targeted system. And that, in turn, might require getting rid of Stephen Miller.
Hey, I can dream.
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*And now he is once again threatening ruinous -- starting August 1. We will see how long that lasts.
**He raised the issue in agriculture only, but one can easily imagine a similar system in other industries.

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