Politics

BREAKING: Trump DOJ Swears In 42 ENFORCEMENT-FIRST Immigration Judges to Fast-Track Deportations

Gary FranchiMarch 13, 2026186 views
BREAKING: Trump DOJ Swears In 42 ENFORCEMENT-FIRST Immigration Judges to Fast-Track Deportations
Photo by Generated on Unsplash

President Trump's Department of Justice delivered another crushing blow to the open-borders crowd this week, swearing in 42 new immigration judges across six key states—all handpicked for their proven records of supporting Trump's mass deportation agenda.

The new judges were deployed to immigration courts in California, Florida, New York, New Jersey, Texas, and Virginia—strategic battleground states where Biden's border crisis created massive backlogs of deportation cases. Unlike the activist judges who spent four years rubber-stamping asylum claims and blocking deportations, these appointees have demonstrated track records of actually enforcing immigration law.

This move represents the latest phase in Trump's systematic overhaul of America's broken immigration court system. While the Biden regime packed these courts with bleeding-heart liberals who treated every sob story as grounds for permanent residency, Trump is installing judges who understand their job: enforce the law and protect American citizens.

Swift Justice for Border Jumpers

The timing couldn't be more perfect. With Trump's mass deportation operation ramping up nationwide, these additional judges will help clear the enormous backlog of cases that piled up during Biden's four-year border disaster. Each of these appointees was carefully vetted to ensure they won't cave to the usual left-wing pressure campaigns demanding they ignore federal immigration statutes.

"We're finally getting judges who understand that immigration law isn't a suggestion," said one administration source familiar with the selection process. "These aren't activist judges looking to rewrite policy from the bench—they're law enforcement professionals."

The strategic placement of these judges in liberal strongholds like California and New York sends a clear message: Trump's immigration enforcement will reach every corner of America, even in sanctuary jurisdictions that have spent years harboring illegal aliens.

Patriots should celebrate this development as another sign that Trump means business on his deportation promises. While establishment Republicans talked tough on immigration for decades without results, Trump continues delivering concrete action that puts American citizens first.

How long before the left-wing legal groups start filing lawsuits to block these judges from doing their jobs?

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Gary Franchi

Award-winning journalist covering breaking news, politics & culture for Next News Network.

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R
ReaganRepublicanVerified5 hours ago
This is exactly the kind of swift action we voted for! No more years of delays and bureaucratic nonsense.
S
SmallTownAmericaVerified4 hours ago
About time we prioritize American citizens and legal immigrants who followed the proper process. My grandparents came here legally through Ellis Island and waited their turn - everyone else should do the same.
P
PatriotMike2024Verifiedjust now
FINALLY! We need judges who will actually enforce the laws on the books instead of activist judges looking for every loophole to let people stay illegally.
T
TexasConservativeVerifiedjust now
Exactly right Mike. The law is the law - if you're here illegally, you should be deported. It's really that simple.
B
BorderStateResidentVerifiedjust now
As someone living in Arizona, I can tell you this is desperately needed. Our local communities have been overwhelmed for years while immigration courts had massive backlogs. My neighbor who works for ICE says they've been waiting for this kind of support from the top.
C
ConstitutionFirstVerifiedjust now
This is what happens when you elect someone who actually wants to secure the border. Trump promised this and he's delivering.
M
MAGA_MamaVerifiedjust now
Promises made, promises kept! 🇺🇸
L
LawAndOrder2025Verifiedjust now
Good question - how long were these backlogs under the previous administration? I heard some cases were taking 3-4 years to get through the system.