President Trump opened his first post-lawsuit television interview with an ironclad declaration: ICE’s nationwide enforcement sweeps “haven’t gone far enough” to secure our borders and uphold American sovereignty.
In the sit-down filmed at Mar-a-Lago for a major Sunday news magazine, the former president blasted the status quo, accusing activist judges of neutering federal immigration agents at every turn.
“No more excuses,” Trump snarled when pressed on dramatic ICE footage—tear gas in Chicago neighborhoods, agents wrestling mothers out of cars. “You have to get the people out. That’s how you save your country.”
He pointed an unwavering finger at “liberal judges” appointed by Biden and Obama who issue stay orders and sanctuary injunctions that hamstring ICE operations. Those judicial roadblocks, he argued, are a direct invitation to cartels and human-smuggling rings.
Trump dismissed media criticism of aggressive enforcement, labeling it “fake outrage” designed to distract from skyrocketing violent crime and unchecked illegal crossings. “The real outrage is open-border chaos,” he insisted. “We will not apologize for enforcing the law.”
He warned that without uncompromising leadership, cartels will continue to flood our streets with drugs, gangs and unknown threats. A second Trump term, he vowed, would reverse every sanctuary policy, rebuild detention capacity and install judges who respect constitutional authority.
The message was unapologetic and resolute: America cannot survive as a nation of laws if those laws are not enforced. Under Trump’s command, federal agents will reclaim their power, borders will be secured and the era of judicial passivity ends now.





