At a White House event last summer to honor ICE and Customs and Border Protection officials, Donald Trump took a moment to single out Ron Vitiello, the acting ICE director, for praise. The president said Vitiello was doing a “great job.”
Evidently, that positive impression did not last.
President Donald Trump has withdrawn his nomination of Ron Vitiello to lead U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, choosing instead to go with a nominee who would chart the critical immigration agency “in a tougher direction.”
“We’re going in a little different direction. Ron is a good man, but we’re going in a tougher direction. We want to go in a tougher direction,” Trump told reporters Friday morning ahead of a trip to the U.S.-Mexico border, when asked about reports that Vitiello’s nomination to lead ICE had been withdrawn. […]
The decision about Vitiello was unexpected, and confusion surrounded the circumstances.
How much confusion? On Friday, when the president was headed to California for a border event, Vitiello was supposed to join Trump — but he was uninvited at the last minute.
The Washington Post added that the acting ICE chief was “blindsided” by the move, and he wasn’t alone: “The decision to ditch Vitiello stupefied Homeland Security officials and lawmakers. Some ICE officials and Senate aides were so taken aback, they told reporters they thought the White House had made a clerical error.”
Many in the Department of Homeland Security were “baffled” by the developments.
Let’s also not overlook the context in which this unfolded: Trump believes there’s a dangerous crisis underway at the country’s southern border. It’s against this backdrop that the president decided to scrap the nomination of his own handpicked ICE director, apparently without warning, and two days later, he accepted Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen’s resignation.









