If you’ve been watching the show this week, you know that we’ve been able to break some significant news about the Trump administration’s Homeland Security funding, specifically as it relates to FEMA, the Coast Guard, and ICE. NBC News summarized where things stand with regards to the controversial financial transfers:
The Department of Homeland Security transferred $169 million from other agencies to Immigration and Customs Enforcement for the detention and removal of migrants this year, according to a document sent to Congress by DHS.
Many of the transfers came from key national security programs, including $1.8 million from the Domestic Nuclear Detection Office, $9.8 million from FEMA, $29 million from the U.S. Coast Guard and more than $34 million from several TSA programs. DHS also transferred $33 million from other ICE programs to pay for detention and removal, making the total amount of money transferred $202 million.
The timing of the news could be better for the Trump administration: as Hurricane Florence reaches the east coast, it’s hard not to wonder why officials transferred funds from FEMA and the Coast Guard — just as hurricane season was poised to begin — in order to pay for ICE’s efforts to detain and deport immigrants.
The argument from administration officials is that this may look bad, but there’s no cause for alarm because disaster-relief funding wasn’t touched. The Department of Homeland Security simply moved other funds around, but not in a way that would affect hurricane response.
There’s a reason that’s not an especially satisfying explanation.









