“The worst is yet to come.”
So wrote Esquire columnist Charles P. Pierce on Monday following the ouster of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen—and as signs that senior White House adviser and xenophobe Stephen Miller is exerting more control over immigration policy.
As Common Dreams reported, President Trump announced Sunday that Nielsen would be leaving her position. During her time as Homeland Security secretary, she oversaw widely condemned policies including the forcible separation of families and the caging of children at the southern border.
Commenting on her tenure, the ACLU tweeted Sunday: “From the family separation crisis she created and defended, to restricting immigrants’ rights to seek asylum, to relentless and pointless efforts to build Trump’s border wall, Nielsen’s department served as the key to Trump’s unconstitutional and anti-immigrant agenda of fear.”
With such a record, progressive lawmakers like Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) welcomed her departure.
“Nielsen will go down in history as presiding over an exceptionally cruel regime that separated families and violated human rights,” Jayapal said. “I welcome her resignation and believe she should be held accountable for the abuses that happened under her watch.”
At the same time, reports that the Trump team is reportedly eyeing a successor with an even more hard-line approach to immigration triggered alarm.
“When even the most radical voices in the administration aren’t radical enough for President Trump,” said Sen. Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, “you know he’s completely lost touch with the American people.”
As the New York Times editorial board wrote,
CNN also reported:
One such request that proved to be a point of contention, according to new reporting by NBC News, was over Trump’s desire to reinstate the policy of family separations. The outlet reported:
That wasn’t the only apparent roadblock. From the Times:
A likely force behind such impossible requests was Miller. In a separate story, CNN reported that Miller “played key a role in Nielsen’s ouster,” and his “heightened influence within the West Wing has been aided by the president, who recently told aides in an Oval Office meeting that Miller was in charge of all immigration and border related issues in the White House, according to a person familiar with the meeting.”
Given this backdrop, Pierce concluded:
Nielsen may be just one of the people Miller has targeted for ousting. According to Politico, the White House adviser has been “telephoning mid-level officials at several federal departments and agencies to angrily demand that they do more to stem the flow of immigrants into the country, according to two people familiar with the calls,” the outlet reported.
Miller was also behind withdrawal of the nomination of acting U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director Ronald Vitiello to lead ICE—a move taken so that the White House could take the agency in a “tougher direction,” Politico reported.
As for Nielsen’s job, Trump announced that Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Kevin McAleenan would serve as acting DHS secretary. With one senior DHS official saying McAleenan is “not an ideologue or fire breather” on immigration and Miller now formally holding the reigns on the matter, however, it’s unclear how long he’ll stay in the role.