Tom Homan
Director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
Tom Homan, acting director of ICE and current border czar, is a key contributor to the hard‑right Project 2025 agenda. Homan has pushed ICE into legally murky territory—expanding deportations to include people who have not committed crimes, ramping up “collateral arrests” in sanctuary cities, and even floating prosecutions of local Democratic leaders who defy federal policies. Notably, he was a driving force behind the Trump-era “zero tolerance” policy that separated thousands of parents and children at the border. Homan has repeatedly vowed to go after sanctuary-city officials, smirking to reporters, “Wait till you see what’s coming,” as he threatened to arrest mayors and governors who refuse cooperation

Homan drafted policies that separate children from their parents at the border.
Zero Tolerance
Family Separations
Tom Homan contributed to Project 2025.
Donald Trump brought back Tom Homan—a key contributor to Project 2025. Homan, who previously led ICE and enforced the controversial family separation policy, helped shape the Project 2025 plan developed by the Heritage Foundation. That nearly 900-page document outlines sweeping proposals for a future Republican administration, including mass deportations, dismantling federal agencies, and replacing civil servants with party loyalists.
Homan contributed specifically to the immigration section of Project 2025, which promotes large-scale detention and deportation of undocumented immigrants. Despite public backlash, he has doubled down on the family separation policy, stating, “I don’t give a s***… we enforced the law.”
Homan ignored judges' orders for illegal border flights.
Tom Homan, the Trump administration's border czar, publicly dismissed concerns over a federal judge's order to halt deportation flights of Venezuelan gang members, including members of the Tren de Aragua (TdA) gang. On "Fox & Friends," Homan stated, "I don’t care what the judges think" about the deportations, expressing defiance toward the court's intervention.
The legal battle began when a federal judge expanded a temporary block on deportations and verbally ordered that a plane carrying nearly 300 TdA members should not leave the U.S. However, Homan claimed the plane had already left U.S. jurisdiction and was in international waters by the time the judge issued the order. He argued that the judge’s decision to potentially return the flight was illogical, questioning why anyone would want to bring "terrorists" back to the U.S.
Homan defended the administration’s actions, emphasizing that President Trump had invoked the Alien Enemies Act to remove violent criminals like TdA and MS-13 gang members from the country, which he argued made the U.S. safer.
