Extent of legal challenges to Trump's deportation plan by December 31, 2025
No Challenges • 25%
Minor Challenges • 25%
Major Challenges • 25%
Overturned • 25%
Court records and news reports on legal actions filed against the deportation plan
Trump's Mass Deportation Plan to Include Family Detention Centers and New Facilities Starting January 20, 2025
Dec 26, 2024, 10:35 PM
President-elect Donald Trump is set to implement a mass deportation plan upon taking office on January 20, 2025. His administration's strategy, outlined by incoming Border Czar Tom Homan, includes the revival of family detention centers for undocumented immigrants, a policy that had been discontinued under the Biden administration in 2021. Homan indicated that migrant families, including those with U.S.-born children, will be detained, and the government will not hesitate to deport parents regardless of their children's citizenship status. The administration plans to build new facilities for detained families and may employ private contractors to assist in tracking down undocumented minors. Homan emphasized that while families will not be separated, they may face difficult choices regarding their U.S.-born children during the deportation process. This policy shift has sparked discussions on its implications for immigration enforcement and the treatment of families at the border.
View original story
More than 10 significant legal challenges • 25%
No significant legal challenges • 25%
1-5 significant legal challenges • 25%
6-10 significant legal challenges • 25%
Challenges in lower courts only • 25%
Challenges reaching the Supreme Court • 25%
No significant legal challenges • 25%
Challenges reaching appellate courts • 25%
Plan blocked • 25%
No legal challenges • 25%
Plan partially blocked • 25%
Plan upheld • 25%
Plan upheld • 25%
Plan modified • 25%
Ongoing litigation • 25%
Plan blocked • 25%
Some upheld, some blocked • 25%
Ongoing litigation • 25%
All blocked • 25%
All upheld • 25%
No decision by end of 2025 • 25%
Upheld • 25%
Overturned • 25%
Partially upheld • 25%
No challenges • 25%
Federal court challenges • 25%
State court challenges • 25%
Both federal and state challenges • 25%
10 to 20 • 25%
Less than 10 • 25%
More than 30 • 25%
21 to 30 • 25%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
Strained Relations • 25%
Improved Relations • 25%
Severely Strained Relations • 25%
No Change • 25%