The Western Journal

Trump Admin Moves to Supercharge Deportations with Unprecedented Immigration Judge Addition

The U.S. Department of Justice announced that the Executive Office for Immigration Review is onboarding 82 new immigration judges (77 full-time and 5 temporary), the largest hiring class in the agency’s history. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said the move is intended too reinforce adherence to immigration law and reduce the immigration court backlog.

The article also claims that since October 1, EOIR has hired 153 permanent immigration judges, and cites DOJ statistics saying EOIR has completed more than 1.08 million cases since January 20, 2025 and reduced its pending caseload by more than 447,000 cases, bringing it from about 4 million to under 3.53 million.

It further reports that, alongside new hires, the Trump management fired more than 100 immigration judges-many appointed during the Biden administration-citing concerns that some judges were dismissed for allegedly not supporting deportation efforts. The piece adds that many newly hired judges previously worked in roles such as ICE legal work, prosecution, or military legal positions.It concludes by referencing Trump’s campaign focus on border security and immigration enforcement, along with claims about reductions in border encounters during his second term’s first year.




The Justice Department announced on Thursday the onboarding of over 80 new immigration judges, the largest addition in agency history.

The Executive Office of Immigration added 77 full-time judges and 5 temporary ones, according to a DOJ news release.

“The Trump administration is committed to reestablishing an immigration judge corps that is dedicated to restoring the rule to the law in our nation’s immigration system,” Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said.

“Today, we are onboarding the largest immigration judge class in agency history. This could only happen thanks to President Trump’s decisive leadership and commitment to securing our borders. I also applaud EOIR’s leadership team for helping facilitate these hiring efforts and recruiting highly qualified and talented personnel in record time,” he added.

EOIR has hired 153 permanent immigration judges since the start of the fiscal year Oct. 1.

The DOJ noted, “Reducing the immigration court backlog remains one of the highest priorities for the agency. Since January 20, 2025, EOIR has completed more than 1.08 million cases and has reduced its pending caseload in immigration courts by more than 447,000 cases, bringing the pending caseload down from approximately 4 million to under 3.53 million, the sharpest decrease in caseload in EOIR’s history.”

CBS News reported that, in addition to hiring new immigration judges, the Trump administration also fired more than 100 of them, many of whom were hired during the Biden administration.

“Some of the judges ousted under the Trump administration have said they believe they were fired over not sufficiently pushing deportations or having backgrounds helping or advocating for immigrants,” CBS said.

“Most of the immigration judges joining the Justice Department’s ranks this week had previously worked as ICE lawyers, prosecutors or in the military, as officers, judge advocates or other roles, according to bios provided by the department. Some worked as state or local judges, or as lawyers in private practice,” the news outlet added.

Greg Chen, senior director for government relations at the American Immigration Lawyers Association, told CBS he believes the Trump administration is seeking to “compel” immigration judges to “act as tools of enforcement, not impartial adjudicators.”

Trump ran on border security and immigration law enforcement during his 2024 campaign.

In January, on the first anniversary of his inauguration, the Department of Homeland Security reported that “nearly 3 million illegal aliens have left the U.S. because of the Trump administration’s crackdown on illegal immigration, including an estimated 2.2 million self-deportations and more than 675,000 deportations.”

Further, “In President Trump’s first year, USBP recorded 95 percent fewer encounters per day along the southwest border than during the Biden administration.”

During Trump’s first year of his second term, the daily average for border encounters was 251, compared with 5,110 under President Joe Biden.

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