Trump Signs $70 Billion Secure America Act for Mass Deportations

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ByJulie Harris

June 29, 2026

President Trump signed a GOP-only funding package front-loading $70 billion for ICE and Border Patrol, securing the financial resources to pursue a target of one million deportations annually.

President Donald Trump signed the Secure America Act into law on Wednesday, providing a $70 billion infusion for immigration enforcement through the remainder of his term. The legislation, passed via budget reconciliation with a 52–47 Senate vote and a narrow 214-212 House margin, allows Republicans to fund a massive deportation agenda without Democratic support. The bill allocates $38 billion to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and $26 billion to the Border Patrol, with an additional $5 billion for unforeseen costs.

By front-loading these funds, the Act ensures a virtually uninterrupted flow of capital for the administration’s goal of one million deportations per year. This structure insulates immigration agencies from annual appropriations fights, which GOP leaders argued had turned federal agents into political pawns. The law follows a six-month impasse over Department of Homeland Security (DHS) funding that began after the deaths of two U.S. citizens during federal enforcement operations in Minneapolis. While Democrats sought to leverage that tragedy for oversight reforms, Republicans ultimately moved the enforcement-only package independently.

The final bill focuses strictly on enforcement after several controversial provisions were stripped, including $1 billion for White House security and a $1.8 billion fund for political allies. The remaining $70 billion is earmarked for expanded domestic investigations, increased detention capacity, and rapid removal operations. Administration officials frame the surge as a tool against human trafficking and cartels, though the statutory language prioritizes the mechanics of mass removal and interior ICE operations.

Democratic opposition was total, with no House Democrats voting for the measure. Critics point to a lack of specific oversight mechanisms or safeguards within the $38 billion ICE allocation, warning of potential civil liberties impacts during expansive raids. Democratic appropriators previously tried to fund non-immigration DHS components like FEMA and the TSA separately, but Republicans rejected the strategy, framing it as an attempt to defund border security.

This package builds on nearly $140 billion in previously authorized enforcement funding, signaling a historic buildup of resources. Republican leadership is already discussing a third reconciliation bill to lock in further justice spending. As the administration begins scaling operations to meet its deportation targets, the Secure America Act stands as the financial cornerstone of a policy shift that prioritizes the rule of law and community character through rigorous interior enforcement. The GOP intends for this enforcement mandate to be a defining issue for voters in the upcoming November midterm elections.

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