ICE Budget Soars to $85 Billion Under Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act
NPR details how Immigration and Customs Enforcement has become the highest‑funded U.S. law‑enforcement agency after President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, jumping from a long‑standing ~$10 billion annual budget to authority over roughly $85 billion. The law gives ICE a $75 billion multi‑year supplement on top of its base budget, meaning if spent steadily the agency would wield nearly $29 billion a year—about triple its recent funding and close to the entire Justice Department’s requested 2026 budget. DHS has set goals of deporting 1 million people annually and expanding detention capacity so ICE can hold up to 100,000 people per day, backed by $45 billion earmarked for new beds, compared with about 65,700 already detained as of Nov. 30. The piece traces the political and migration context—from Obama‑era underfunding through Trump’s first term, Title 42 under Biden, and Trump’s 2025 return—showing how rising encounters and nativist politics paved the way for this escalation. It also notes growing criticism over ICE tactics, including masked agents sweeping U.S. neighborhoods and the killing of Renee Macklin Good in Minneapolis, as civil‑rights advocates warn that an agency now larger than all other federal law‑enforcement budgets combined is operating with limited transparency or oversight.
📌 Key Facts
- ICE’s budget was under $6 billion in 2015 and hovered near $10 billion for years before Trump’s second term.
- The July 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill Act granted ICE a $75 billion multi‑year supplement on top of a roughly $10 billion base budget, giving it authority over about $85 billion total.
- If the supplemental is drawn down evenly and current levels persist, ICE would effectively control nearly $29 billion per year—making it the highest‑funded U.S. law‑enforcement agency.
- The law allocates $45 billion specifically to expand immigration detention, with DHS claiming capacity will rise to 100,000 detainees daily; as of Nov. 30 ICE held about 65,735 people.
- The Trump administration has set an explicit target of deporting 1 million people per year, using the supercharged ICE as the lead instrument of its interior crackdown.
📊 Analysis & Commentary (1)
"The piece criticizes the Trump administration’s massive ICE funding increase—arguing that pouring money into enforcement expands capacity for controversial raids and detentions but fails to fix oversight, civil‑rights, and governance problems, producing "more money, same problems.""
📰 Source Timeline (1)
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