What A Day - Trump Takes Down US Immigration System
Episode Date: September 25, 2025The machinery of mass deportations has been operating both in plain sight and out of view since President Donald Trump took office back in January. As millions of people are being deported, thousands ...more are stuck in detention facilities across the country. In fact, the exact number of people in Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention right now is 58,766, according to ICE data. The vast majority have no criminal record, but the Trump administration is denying them bond at an astounding rate, forcing them to stay in dirty and decrepit detention facilities for months on end with no hope of getting their day in court. But aside from that, there’s a lot we don’t know about the immigration system, as it’s operating right now. To discuss immigration policy in more detail, we spoke with Katie Blankenship, an attorney who represents clients navigating the immigration system.And in headlines, more than 100 countries at the United Nations General Assembly agree to mitigate climate change, sans the United States, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz clarified that Tylenol, is not in fact bad for you, and the federal government is asking scores of employees who lost their jobs (thanks to Elon Musk) to pretty please come back.Show Notes:Call Congress – 202-224-3121Subscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/3kk4nyz8What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Thursday, September 25th. I'm Jane Koston. And this is Waday. The show that
learned Jimmy Kimmel's return to ABC late night after a suspension by Disney garnered more than
6.3 million viewers on broadcast television. And as of the time of this recording, more than
16 million views on YouTube and counting. Thanks, Trump administration.
Today's show, more than 100 countries of the United Nations General Assembly agree to mitigate
climate change, sans the United States.
And the federal government is asking scores of employees who lost their jobs, thanks to Elon Musk
to pretty plays, come back.
But let's start with immigration.
The Department of Homeland Security issued a major announcement on Tuesday.
In a statement, the agency said that, quote,
2 million illegal aliens have been removed or have self-deported since January 20th.
In an interview last week, Homeland Security Secretary, Christine Nome, praised the
mass deportation effort because, of course, she did.
That has sent a clear message.
It's sent a clear message to everyone that the boss has changed.
There's somebody new in the White House that's very different than the last president.
And this president cares about safety and security.
Wow.
It's wild how I don't feel any safer or better having learned that information.
Actually, I feel way, way worse.
The machinery of mass deportations has been operating both in plain sight and out of view
since President Donald Trump took office back in January.
As millions of people are being deported,
thousands more are stuck in detention facilities across the country.
In fact, the exact number of people
in immigration and customs enforcement detention right now
is 58,766, according to ICE data.
The vast majority have no criminal record,
but the Trump administration is denying them bond
at an astounding rate,
forcing them to stay in dirty and decrepit detention facilities
for months on end with no hope of getting their day in court.
I should mention that on Wednesday, a gunman opened fire on an ice facility in Dallas.
According to the New York Times, one detainee was killed and two others were critically injured.
There's a lot we don't know about this shooting as of our recording time on Wednesday evening Pacific Time.
And there's a lot we don't know about the immigration system as it's operating right now.
So to talk more about what immigration policy really looks like on the ground, I spoke to Katie Blankenship,
an attorney who represents clients going through the immigration process.
Katie, welcome to what a day.
It is so great to be back. Thank you for having me.
Last time we spoke to you back in July, you were talking about how difficult it was to get in touch with your clients after they were put in iced detention centers and how bad the conditions were in a lot of those centers. Has that situation changed at all?
it's gotten worse
it's gotten worse
what we see is that
and this was beginning
the last time we were talking
it was around the time
of the opening of what's called
alligator alcatres
and as we feared
that's sort of been the first
of many to come
since then in Florida
the Baker Correctional Institute
has opened
it's literally just a recipe book
they just did the exact same
thing they did
with the Everglades camp
and they're having
all the same issues
you know I had to fight
with a guard yesterday
day about the concept of legal mail. So it's not getting much better. And I wanted to actually
ask about that Everglades facility. I had read recently that because a judge ordered it to be
shut down, there are tons of people there who no one knows where they are. So this has been an issue
with these camps that they open up like this. And you cannot find them on the ice locator. For those
that don't know, the ice locator is a public database. You can go find your people that way. You need
certain information, but it's user-friendly. It's for all of us. You can't find them there, though,
which by law ICE is supposed to be able to have this tracking system so you know who's in
ICE custody. You can't find them on the court website. You can't file documents for them in court
the way you can for other clients. And they're literally being disappeared from their families.
When we had a client who was actually deported to Mexico, it took about eight days for his
family to even hear from him. And we said,
What happened during this transit? What's going on? He said, I'm just in this detention limbo without any access to a phone, anybody to speak to being held in mysterious places on the border, over the border. And it just continues to be this huge mess and human rights abuses.
And NPR reported on Tuesday that nearly 20 immigration judges were fired this month via email. And that's in addition to the over 80 judges that have already been cut by President Trump this year. Can you explain what this means for the immigration system?
Like, doesn't the Trump administration need judges to hear cases if their goal is to deport people who don't have legal status?
Like, that was something, you know, I've been reading conservative outlets where they were talking about, oh, we should actually be hiring way more judges.
Well, every part of the system is not only at a crucial breaking point, it's broken.
These systems are not working right now.
One of the biggest issues that we're saying about this is in detention where judges' calendars are so backlog and the government has basically canceled bond and all parole.
you are stuck in there.
And then you don't have enough IJs to hear the cases
and people are trapped in detention.
But, you know, all of this is a problem of intentional making, right?
Like, look at what happened in San Francisco.
San Francisco just had a slew of their immigration judges fired.
They were fired if you look at them on their denial rates,
meaning the Trump administration basically said,
you're granting too much asylum.
And just based on those numbers, we're canning you, like, you're gone.
which is bizarre on so many levels,
but it also means that you are just blatantly politicizing these offices.
And then you take that with the memo of,
oh, we'll put anybody now as an IJ.
We'll take any lawyer, any lawyer can now be an immigration judge.
You don't have to have immigration experience.
These are becoming political appointments
and squashing as much as they can all rights to relieve for immigrants.
Yeah, like the Trump administration is reportedly recruiting hundreds of military lawyers to sit as immigration judges because the government says they need more judges to handle this backlog of cases and speed up Trump's mass deportation mission.
But also, as to your point, it just seems like the administration is replacing more experienced judges who know what asylum is and how to grant it with lawyers who don't have experience who are just going to deny every single claim and make sure more people are deported.
Yes. And this is another critical piece that people have to remember and that they are maintaining.
them in detention for as long as possible, right? There's a lot of narrative of how they want
to deport everyone. Kind of. Kind of. They want that. They also want to lock as many people up
as possible for as long as possible, because you and I and every taxpayer in this country
pay about 200 bucks a day per person. And you alluded to this in San Francisco, but we've also
seen reporting that a lot of the immigration judges who haven't been fired yet are facing
pressure from their bosses in the Trump administration to dismiss more cases, which means,
means their clients are no longer awaiting trial and therefore can be deported without said trial.
In your experience, are more of your cases being dismissed?
All right. So this is such a critical point of understanding where there are pressure points.
There are plenty of immigration judges out there that are very happy to get on the Trump train, right?
There are plenty of immigration judges who are here because they're immigration experts and have
very good, great reasons for wanting this job. But what happens, even in the
those courtrooms, you see their denial rates skyrocket up. I'm losing cases on such strong
asylum camps that I was winning three months ago, even under the Trump administration. I'm losing
cases for clients that people who have very clear risk of torture and death in Haiti,
it replaces where it is well documented, where they can show evidence of specific persecution at
the hands of gang affiliated police members. And that is, that's terrifying, right? That's
That's life and death. That's not just, oh, it's a data point. That means somebody is likely
getting deported and will be killed because of it. Whereas weeks ago, this country said,
absolutely, you cannot safely return here without finding yourself a corpse. And now we say,
goodbye. And if you don't like that, then we'll fire you and find a military officer who will
sit in your cloak and do it for us. And we're also learning from some
sources that Department of Homeland Security lawyers are showing up in person to their hearings
more often filing motions to dismiss. Have you seen this occur on any of your cases in immigration
court? This is the other thing that's a big change is that so most people know how the criminal
justice system works. You work with attorneys on other sides. They'll talk with you about the
case. You'll try to find an equitable way to move forward. That's always been a little bit more
difficult in dealing with the immigration system. But today, it is no, no, no. And if you win
anything, even the most just blanket this person deserve to win, we will appeal it. So everything
they can do to stymie it, they're appealing bond. So even if you win bond now under this tiny
window where you can get it, the government's like, oh, guess what, we're appealing and staying
it. So no. Yeah. And the Trump administration has told judges they can't offer bonds to anyone
who has entered the country illegally. Those people are now ineligible for that, which means
they can't go back to their jobs or families or do anything while they await trial.
They're just in detention.
And as you mentioned, they could be in detention for months and months.
Who knows how long?
It is typical under this administration, what I've seen is the clients that I have had since January are still there today unless they were on a deportation flight.
It seems like all of this, intimidating current judges, taking away due process for detainees, the judicial dismissals, the horrible
conditions in detention centers is just anti-immigrant animus made into policy by the Trump
administration. Do you have any sense of what they're going to do next? Because I mean, my
interpretation of their end goal is no more immigration. Just that's it. No more. No one's allowed in.
That's it. And anyone who tries in any way, even if it's legal, even if they are, you know,
trying their best to follow the law, even if they are seeking asylum because they've experienced
discrimination or experiencing death threats for being a Christian or something like that.
It's still like, nope, fuck you. Sorry.
100%. And it is all of this anti-immigrant animus fueling everything for profit, right?
It is much more about the political power and the profit than even the racism.
It is the way that those in power have tried to fuck us from the beginning, right?
We're going to use racism as a political tool. Oh, it gives us political power. We get to do all this
stuff to drum up all this racism and anti-immigrant animus, and we're going to fuel everybody
of and make them hate the other. By the way, we just gave ourselves $43 billion. By the way,
GEO Group is laughing to the bank. So the question, well, where do they go from that? They will
keep going as far as they can possibly go to lock more people up. They're not going to want
to completely somehow, you know, close all immigration. What's scary is that if they actually
have what they wanted where they can clear the country of immigrants or whatever they want to do,
like who's going in those detention centers they're building because they ain't right and who's
going to go in the private detention centers and who is going to get all the money they're getting
from vendors that are you know supposedly feeding people in those centers and putting in beds
and paying for the walls and paying for the construction katie i know that this work is so
important that you do thank you so much for your time and for joining me it's pleasure to be here
as always that was my conversation with immigration attorney katie blenkinship
We'll link to her organization in the show notes.
We'll get to more of the news in a moment.
But if you like the show, make sure to subscribe,
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Here's what else we're following today.
Headlines.
If you have a high fever, as you point out,
if you've got significant issues of that nature, you ought to be talking to a doctor anyway
because the cause of the high fever is worrisome.
The doctor's almost certainly going to prescribe you something.
Tylenol might be one of the things they give.
That's not the problem.
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz just said the magic
words, you ought to be talking to a doctor.
Let's back up a second.
Remember Trump's Monday announcement that taking Tylenol while pregnant can be associated with
an increased risk of autism while offering no real credible evidence?
Trump added pregnant women should, quote,
fight like hell not to take it unless medically necessary,
even though it's the only over-the-counter medication they can take for high fevers.
Now Oz, who was at that unhinged press conference,
is sharing his thoughts on acetaminophen, aka Tylenol,
in a rambling interview with TMZ on Tuesday.
There's lots of literature that would cast doubt on the assumption
that you should be taking acetaminophen willy-nilly.
Take it when it's appropriate.
We don't have a lot of other options, as pregnant women know.
Do you know any pregnant women who take anything willy-nilly?
But in an opinion that actually matters, the World Health Organization is also pushing back on Trump's Tylenol's link to autism claims.
That's in addition to, you know, the studies that don't prove the claim.
The WHO said in the statement Wednesday there's, quote,
no conclusive scientific evidence confirming a possible link between autism and use of acetaminopin,
also known as paracetamol, during pregnancy.
And again, take medical advice from your doctor.
not the president of the United States.
The federal government is asking hundreds of employees laid off,
a.k.a. Doj. from the General Services Administration,
to come back to work, according to an internal memo obtained by the Associated Press.
The GSA is the independent agency that manages government buildings and office spaces nationwide.
It was a big target of the Department of Government Efficiency's cost-cutting crusade.
Days into Trump's second term, the GSA sent out orders to terminate
about 7,500 federal leases across the country. Then, starting in March, thousands of employees
left the GSA, either accepting government offers to resign or retire early, or getting a pink slip.
In the middle of all this, efficiency, 131 leases expired without the government vacating,
racking up expensive fees from landlords, which the government so kindly passed on to taxpayers.
Thanks, Elon. So it makes sense the Trump administration is changing its tune,
especially when some of its laid-off employees have continued to receive their paychecks.
Again, efficiency.
An independent congressional watchdog is looking into all of this and expects to issue findings in the next few months.
But in the meantime, any employees who accept the government's offer must return to work by October 6th.
The carbon footprint is a hoax.
No more global warming, no more global cooling.
All of these predictions made by the United Nations,
and many others, often for bad reasons, were wrong.
They were made by stupid people that have cost their country's fortunes and given those
same countries no chance for success.
The theory of global cooling hasn't been a thing since 1975 since it, you know, didn't happen.
So Trump being mad about it checks out.
And actually, world leaders are feeling pretty smart about their commitment to fighting climate
change.
Thank you very much.
Earlier in the week, in a speech at the United Nations General Assembly, Trump railed
against clean energy policies.
Yes, windmills were, again, a target.
But on Wednesday, heads of more than 120 nations
gathered at a UN climate summit
to talk about how they would do their part
to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
And that included the president of China,
which is the world's largest polluter.
In a video address, President Xi Jinping
told the group that China was going to step up its efforts
and cut emissions 7 to 10% by 2035.
China spews about a third of the globe's
carbon dioxide emissions, so that's saying.
something. After years of trying to rally other nations to fight global warming, the U.S. now stands
as one of the few holdouts, something that isn't lost on China. In his remarks, Xi took a not-so-veiled
swipe at Trump's climate policies, saying, quote, while some countries are acting against it,
the international community should stay focused on the right direction. Hmm, that does not
feel great. Brace yourselves. YouTube is clearing the way for creators who are banned for pedaling
conspiracies, like FBI Deputy Director Dan Bonjino to make a comeback. According to parent
company Alphabet, YouTube will offer creators a way to rejoin the platform if they were banned for
violating COVID-19 and election misinformation policies that are no longer in effect. The move comes
as congressional Republicans look into whether former President Joe Biden's administration
pressured tech companies to censor online content. In a letter submitted to the House Judiciary Committee,
attorneys for Alphabet wrote, quote, no matter the political atmosphere, YouTube will continue to
enable free expression on its platform, particularly as it relates to issues subject to political
debate. This is the latest in a cascade of content moderation rollbacks from tech companies
that crack down on disinformation during the pandemic and after the 2020 election, but have since
faced pressure from Trump and other conservatives who argue they unlawfully stifled right-wing
voices in the process. Even as though same conservatives want to stifle left-wing voices.
Oh, the irony. And that's the news.
Before we go, a new episode of our subscriber-exclusive series Polar Coaster is out now.
Dan Pfeiffer breaks down how the Disney boycott gained momentum,
the impact of Jimmy Kimmel's return, and why censorship will keep making headlines.
He also dives into inter-party conflicts, the illusion of Trump's broad support, and why engaging
young voters is more important than ever. To hear the full conversation and support our work
at Crooked, subscribe on Substack, YouTube, or Apple, or visit crooked.com slash friends.
That's all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review.
Watch in horror as the president of the United States writes a lengthy essay about an escalator
and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading, and not just about how Trump and First Lady Melania Trump got stuck on a broken escalator at the United Nations General Assembly, and it turns out Trump is really, really, really, really upset about it, like, really upset about it.
On Wednesday, he wrote on true social, quote, this wasn't a coincidence. This was triple sabotage at the UN. They ought to be ashamed of themselves. I'm sending a copy of this letter to the Secretary General, and I demand an immediate investigation. No wonder the United Nations hasn't been able to do the job they'd think.
were put in existence to do.
All security tapes that the escalator should be saved, especially the emergency stop
button.
The Secret Service is involved.
Like me, What Today is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Jane Koston.
And again, this was about an escalator that temporarily became stairs.
What Today is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Desmond Taylor.
Our associate producer is Emily Four.
Our video editor is Joseph Dutra.
Our video producer is Johanna Case.
We had production help today from Greg Walters, Matt Berg, Megan Larson, Gina Pollock, and Jonah Eatman.
Our senior producer is Erica Morrison, and our senior vice president of News and Politics is Adrian Hill.
We had helped today from the Associated Press.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.
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I don't know.
Thank you.