The Trump administration fired back at Minnesota Governor Tim Walz Thursday after he questioned whether immigration enforcement operations were actually improving public safety. According to Walz, there's "no verifiable evidence" these efforts are "making America safer." The White House clearly disagreed.
The Administration's Counter-Argument
The statement framed Walz's comments as an attack on federal immigration law enforcement itself. The administration pointed to what it called a steep nationwide homicide decline during 2025, with even sharper drops in cities where targeted enforcement and crime initiatives took place.
The numbers they're highlighting are substantial: more than 650,000 undocumented immigrants deported since taking office, with about 70% facing criminal charges or convictions. That's the administration's main argument that enforcement focuses on public safety threats, not random sweeps.
Specific Operations and Statistics
The White House cited a Florida operation that arrested 150 undocumented immigrant sex offenders. In Chicago, enforcement actions allegedly coincided with a significant drop in violent crime, though the statement didn't detail the causal connection.
Beyond traditional crime metrics, the release noted that on-duty law enforcement deaths fell nearly 25% during 2025. Authorities also removed more than 9,500 non-English-speaking commercial truck drivers from roads, citing safety concerns without providing specific incident data.




