Trump forced to deploy border czar to clean up Markwayne Mullin mess: report



Violent clashes between protesters and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents at Newark's Delaney Hall detention facility forced the Trump administration to deploy its top immigration official for emergency de-escalation after newly appointed DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin made the situation dramatically worse.


According to Politico reporting by Myah Ward, tensions that had been escalating nightly cooled only after border czar Tom Homan was dispatched to meet with state and local officials and negotiate a resolution to the standoff.

The crisis began when images and videos surfaced showing violent clashes between pro-immigrant demonstrators and ICE agents outside the 1,000-bed, privately run detention facility. The unrest followed allegations of poor conditions inside the facility and a detainee hunger strike. Democratic lawmakers descended on the site to condemn detention conditions and accuse federal agents of violence against protesters.

Mullin's response made matters worse. The new DHS secretary threatened to pull customs staffing from Newark Liberty International Airport—a threat that shocked administration officials and sparked airline industry fears of travel chaos across the region.

The White House responded by deploying Homan, following a playbook it had previously used to defuse tensions in Minnesota. The border czar spent five days on the ground meeting with Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, police leadership, state troopers, and Gov. Mikie Sherrill to negotiate a path forward, according to Politico.

In a bid to counter allegations of unsanitary conditions, Homan made a symbolic visit to Delaney Hall, where he ate spaghetti with detainees. He subsequently claimed local officials agreed to most of his demands, including establishing designated protest zones. Democratic officials countered that the Department of Homeland Security simply agreed to restore family visitation to the facility—a demand the community had pressed.

Politico is reporting that the use of Homan underscores his "enduring influence as one of the president's top immigration policy advisers." It also reveals the administration's increasing reliance on the border czar to respond to escalating unrest surrounding federal immigration enforcement.