
Jim Jordan (R-OH), chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, announced that his section would hold a reading this week to examine new protests aimed at a New Jersey immigration and customs police service as well as what he described as Democrats ‘ growing attempts to thwart federal immigration enforcement.
Jordan previewed the hear, which is scheduled for Tuesday, May 20 in an interview with Fox News host Brian Kilmeade on Sunday. Rep. Jeff Van Drew (R-NJ), who represents the area where the opposition took place, was confirmed as the representative.
Jordan also cited a separate incident in Milwaukee where he claimed a judge let” the poor man out the back door” as federal officials made an arrest, as an illustration of local obstructing federal immigration enforcement.
” This is about ICE agencies doing their job, enforcing the law, and being targeted or harmed by local Democratic areas,” he continued.
We want to hold the hearing to discuss both the events that occurred in New Jersey last week and the wider issues about ICE providers and their actions. Native communities are making it difficult on them, according to Jordan, and they are enforcing and putting the law into practice.
Executive LIKELY HAD CANCER, BIDEN COVID-19 ADVISER SAYS.
A hearing on” Examining Challenges to ICE Operations” will be held on Tuesday, May 20 at 2:00 p.m. EST in the Rayburn House Office Building. The hearing is in response to a new protest at the Delaney Hall ICE detention center in Newark, New Jersey. It will concentrate on what Democratic lawmakers refer to as more and more aggressive attempts by local governments and advocacy organizations to hinder federal immigration protection. The reading will examine the operational difficulties that ICE agents face in addition to their wider impact on national security and public safety.
Members of the committees are expected to investigate how shelter laws, neighborhood non-cooperation, and political engagement may be affecting the organization’s capability to carry out its mission. Former ICE officers Scott Mechkowski and Charles Marino, both of whom held leadership positions in the organization’s New York Field Office, are among the witnesses who are scheduled to testify. Their evidence is likely to show both the social and practical forces that ICE personnel are subject to on the ground.