Minnesota Governor Tim Walz had no idea he bit off way more than he could chew.
Democrats couldn’t believe what they were seeing.
And Tim Walz picked one fight with Tom Homan that can only end in one brutal way.
As Conservative Reboot reports:
Tim Walz rallied leftist militias and deployed crazed leftists into the streets of Minneapolis to interfere in ICE operations, rounding up and arresting illegal aliens for deportation.
Two violent agitators got themselves shot and killed, one by running over an ICE agent with her vehicle, and the second by violently obstructing and resisting arrest.
Following these incidents, President Trump drew down the number of ICE agents operating in Minneapolis and fired Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem as well as Border Patrol Chief Gregory Bovino.
Leftists cheer, believing their street violence forced President Trump to back down on a signature campaign promise.
But Tom Homan made it clear that Walz and his fellow leftists were woefully mistaken if they believed Trump shelved his plan for mass deportations.
Newsmax host Rob Finnerty asked Homan about the fact that deportation numbers were at 8,000 per week before the leftist insurrection in Minneapolis and fell to 5,000 per week in week in it’s wake.
Finnerty put it to Homan if that decline in deportations meant Democrats won the immigration wars.
“Just a quick one, I’ve only got about 30 seconds, Tom. Deportation numbers are down. Pre-Alex Pretti, Renee Good, we were at about 8,000 a week. Now, we are just above 5,000 a week. Kristi Noem’s gone. Greg Bovino is gone. Did the media and the Democrats win in the state of Minnesota? Are those numbers going to come back up?” Finnerty wondered.
Homan told Finnerty that the operation in Minneapolis cleared 4,000 criminal illegal aliens off the streets and that hired 10,000 new agents, meaning that deportations were set to increase.
“Of course, the numbers are going to come back. We just hired 10,000 more agents. … Minnesota, I see people say we surrendered. No, we didn’t. We took over 4,000 people off the streets of that state, most of them criminals. Number two, we walked away with cooperation from just about every county jail and the state prison system, which means this: It’s safer for the officers,” Homan began.
Homan went on to say that the agreement he secured with local governments in Minnesota to cooperate with ICE agents taking illegal aliens into custody at jails instead of releasing them onto the streets was another victory.
“It’s safer for the community when we can arrest the public safety threat in the safety and security of the jail. So, rather than sending a dozen people to go look for somebody, a public safety threat in the state of Minnesota, now we’ve got one agent arresting one illegal alien in the county jail. What does that mean? That releases 11 other people to look for more people,” Homan concluded.