While President Obama’s expected executive action on immigration remains on hold, the number of deportations the U.S. carries out is not only in sharp decline, it’s also on track to hit its lowest numbers since the start of the president’s first term, according to the Associated Press.
In analyzing internal documents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the AP found that between October 2013 and July 28, 2014 the agency deported 258,608 undocumented immigrants, down nearly 20% from the year before. During the same period ending in July 2012, ICE deported 344,624 people, amounting to almost 25% more than this past year, the analysis found.
The new numbers follow a path of decline seen reflected in deportation policy shifts in recent years under Obama, who received sharp criticism from immigration advocates. They labeled Obama “deporter-in-chief” for leading the most deportations under any White House administration, with more than 2 million people removed over the course of his presidency.
Advocates now expect the president to protect potentially millions more undocumented immigrants from threats of deportation by issuing executive action after the midterm elections in November, a move he had previously vowed to take by the end of the summer. As many as 70,000 people could be deported between now and the Nov. 4 elections, advocates say, adding to the urgency behind the policy shift.
But deportations are already in decline, thanks in part to policy changes made near the end of Obama’s first term. With what is known as the “Morton memos,” the administration in 2011 tasked immigration officials with using proprietorial discretion in deportation cases, focusing on deporting undocumented immigrants with criminal records and histories of removals.
Though advocates contest that noncriminals with strong roots in the U.S. are often swept up in the dragnet of immigration arrests and placed on track to deportation proceedings, Marc Rosenblum, deputy director at the non-partisan think tank Migration Policy Institute, said ICE has been largely successful in implementing the policy priorities against immigrants convicted of crimes.
“As the total interior deportation numbers have gone down, the removals increasingly consist of people who commit serious crime,” he said.
But as aggressive enforcement efforts picked up steam, the courts and judges available to process those cases are also having an impact on the number of people deported each year. On average, undocumented immigrants see a nearly two-year wait time with their cases being processed through the immigration courts, a backlog that only started reaching a head after 9/11, when border security and immigration enforcement rose to prominence in the wake of the terror attacks.
“There is a lot more people flowing in the system than there are judges to adjudicate their cases,” Rosenblum said, adding that a Migration Policy Institute study found that while budgets funding enforcement and border security have increased nearly 300%, by comparison, the funds for the court systems processing those cases grew by just 70%.









