AOC Warns of ICE ‘Explosion’ After Trump Bill Passes

Democrat deputy Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in New York warned against an “explosion” of immigration and customs (ICE) and a “barbarism” which followed in the hands of the “large and beautiful bill” passing the room on Thursday.
Nowsweek Contacted the Ministry of Internal Security (DHS) by email for comments.
Why it matters
This legislative victory for the Trump administration comes after record debates on the legislation and the vote of the subsequent chamber, with the legislators and defenders now concerned about its possible impact on a national level.
The president campaigned on mass deportations and made immigration a key pillar during his second term. Trump named Tom Homan as his tsar border to help make these initiatives.
The adoption of the “big and beautiful invoice” marks an important step for the administration of Trump and opens the way to a new disputed chapter of immigration policy.
What to know
Let’s move on to social media after the adoption of the bill, Ocasio-Cortez expressed its concerns about what the bill now means in terms of ice funding.
“I do not think that anyone is prepared for what he has just done with ice,” published the New York legislator on Bluesky. “It is not a simple increase in the budget. It is an explosion – making ice more than the FBI, the American prisons, DEA and other handsets.”
Cortez concluded: “It is set up to make sure that what is happening now looks like child’s play. And people disappear.”
In a follow -up article, she said that she “cries the barbarism that would take place from all this”.
“People will die. The means of subsistence have disappeared. Everything to nourish a corrupt kleptocracy. I see every day that is different from the first time. There is no railing. A disaster. I am sorry that we must live through it,” said Ocasio-Cortez.
In the bill, $ 45 billion will be submitted to ICE for detention capacity while allocating 29.9 billion dollars in additional funding to the agency until September 30, 2029.
Ice financing now exceeds that of many soldiers around the world.
Immigration raids in Los Angeles last month launched unrest in the city of angels and drew the attention of those of Washington and throughout the nation, while other demonstrations have germinated.
Riots took place in part of the city center of Los Angeles in reaction to the ice raids, which prompted Mayor Karen Bass to initiate a curfew.

In recent weeks, the bill has also aroused widespread concerns concerning health care coverage, in particular Medicaid and the Act respecting affordable care (ACA). The bill will now require MEDICAIDE beneficiaries for at least 80 hours a month, among other provisions.
What people say
Interim Ice Director Todd Lyons on X, formerly Twitter, Thursday: “I speak on behalf of the whole agency when I say that the ice is grateful to President Trump for having put the hard work necessary to pass the big bill through the finish line – but the real victory is for the American people.”
Lyon continued: “The unprecedented financing of the ice will allow my officers and agents who work hard to continue to secure America by identifying, by stopping and eliminating criminal foreigners from our communities. I am delighted to work with secretary Noem, the congress and the president to protect our families, our friends and our neighbors.”
DHS secretary, Kristi Noem, also posted on X Thursday: “The adoption of today Big Beautiful Bill is a victory for the law and order and the safety and security of the American people. This financing of $ 165 billion will help @dhsgov and our brave applications of the law Deliver more on President Trump’s mandate to arrest and deport illegal criminal foreigners and make America again. Trump!
Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, principal researcher at American Immigration Council, on X Thursday: “With this vote, the Congress makes the Ice the Federal Enforcement Agency of the most funded history in history, with more money per year at its disposal over the next four years than the budgets of the FBI, the DEA, the ATF, the American marshals and the Bureau of combined prisons.”
What happens next
While the partisan debate continues to degenerate, the real effects of the legislation on immigration policy and the application of federal laws should become focal points of the electoral cycles halfway and 2028.