When politicians deliberately create chaos, they shouldn’t act shocked when someone else has to clean it up.
Yet that’s exactly what we’re witnessing in America’s immigration debate.
For years, the Biden-Harris administration dismantled border enforcement, narrowed deportation priorities, and presided over an unprecedented wave of illegal immigration. Millions entered the country illegally. Cities declared themselves sanctuaries. Immigration courts buckled under impossible caseloads. Local governments struggled to absorb the costs. Americans were repeatedly told the border was “secure” even as the evidence told a different story.
Now the same political voices who dismissed the crisis are condemning the men and women tasked with restoring order.
That’s not leadership. It’s blame-shifting.
Every time ICE executes a lawful warrant or arrests someone who entered the country illegally, the cameras arrive. Protesters gather. Politicians rush to microphones to denounce federal agents as though they are the cause of the problem rather than the consequence of years of failed policy.
No one celebrates immigration enforcement. It is difficult, dangerous work carried out because previous leaders failed to enforce the law before the problem reached this scale.
Whenever force is used by law enforcement, it deserves careful review and transparency. That principle should never change.
But neither should another truth.
If millions of people had not been encouraged—implicitly or explicitly—to believe America’s immigration laws would not be enforced, today’s confrontations would be far less common.
Here in the Hudson Valley, we’ve watched elected officials march in protests against ICE while remaining largely silent about the burdens placed on taxpayers, schools, hospitals, law enforcement, and communities expected to absorb the consequences of Washington’s failures. Standing in front of television cameras criticizing immigration enforcement may generate applause, but it does nothing to solve the underlying problem.
Compassion and secure borders are not mutually exclusive. America has always been a nation strengthened by legal immigration. But every sovereign nation also has the right—and the obligation—to decide who enters, under what conditions, and to enforce those decisions fairly and consistently.
The rule of law is not optional. It cannot be suspended because enforcing it has become politically unpopular.
History should remember this moment honestly.
The immigration crisis was not created by the ICE agent serving a warrant today.
It was created by politicians who abandoned enforcement yesterday.
And now that someone else is cleaning up the mess, those same politicians would rather blame the janitor than explain who left the building in ruins.