The United States is dedicated to deporting all undocumented immigrants. But is that a realistic goal and does it make sense?
getty
Americans are fed up—and for good reason.
Decades of weak borders, overwhelmed cities, and a system that often seemed to reward illegal entry have left many feeling that their country is failing. Families watch as schools and hospitals strain under sudden inflows of new arrivals. Workers see wages suppressed in construction, agriculture, and service jobs where immigrants congregate. And every new caravan or record border crossing reignites a raw sense of betrayal: Why can’t we just enforce the law?
That frustration is legitimate. It fuels the powerful call for mass deportation—the idea that only a sweeping, no-holds-barred removal operation can restore order and sovereignty. The instinct is understandable: when the system fails so visibly, the urge to hit reset hard is powerful.
But here’s the uncomfortable truth: the closer we push toward perfect enforcement, the less perfect our solution becomes. Take one example. Just a few days ago, ICE released a report indicating that in January 2026, there were 17 deaths of immigrants in detention. By contrast, in all of 2025, there were only 33 deaths. In 2024, there were only 11. The trend is disturbing. The reality is clear. The more the arrests and deportations, the more the costs—financial, legal, economic, and social. What initially seems like strength can quickly become self-defeating. That’s where the conversation veers from difficult into unrealistic.
The Numbers Don’t Lie
According to current government publications, there are 11 million unauthorized immigrants in the United States today. Many of these individuals have lived in the country for years—often decades. They work, pay taxes, raise families, and contribute to local economies. Broader data from the American Immigration Council shows immigrants collectively contribute over $1.3 trillion annually and pay hundreds of billions in taxes.
What is often overlooked in ambitious enforcement proposals is a basic economic reality: the closer any system gets to perfection, the more expensive and intrusive it becomes. Eliminating 50 percent of undocumented immigrants is difficult. Eliminating 90 percent is vastly harder. Chasing the final margin—total control—requires exponential increases in resources, legal process, and societal friction. At some point, the effort ceases to be practical policy and becomes an exercise in futility.
The Deportation Blueprint
The Heritage Foundation and allied groups have laid out detailed frameworks for dramatically scaling deportations, including expanding worksite enforcement, increasing detention capacity, prioritizing all removable individuals, and encouraging self-deportation through sustained pressure such as E-Verify mandates and benefit restrictions.
The current strategy, calling for the deportation of 1 million undocumented immigrants this year, also emphasizes stricter asylum rules and large-scale mobilization of enforcement resources. Its focus on self-deportation and targeted pressure is a pragmatic lever that recognizes reality: making illegal presence increasingly untenable can achieve results without universal roundups.
On paper, it is comprehensive.
Enforcement Meets Reality
Deporting one million people a year would require a sustained effort far beyond current capacity. It would mean vastly expanding detention facilities, increasing immigration enforcement personnel, and pushing an already overwhelmed immigration court system—now facing a backlog of over 3.3 million cases—even further past its limits.
Layer on top of that the financial cost—estimated by some analyses to reach into the hundreds of billions over time—and the logistical complexity becomes overwhelming. This is not just a question of scale. It is a question of efficiency. Each additional deportation would cost more, require more legal process, and generate greater resistance than the last—illustrating a fundamental truth: perfection in enforcement is not just unattainable, it is prohibitively expensive.
Policy fails not when it lacks ambition, but when it demands a level of perfection no human system can deliver. And that’s before considering the economic consequences. Industries such as agriculture, hospitality, and construction rely heavily on migrant labor. While targeted enforcement against criminals and recent arrivals has delivered results without collapsing sectors, blanket-scale operations risk broader disruption and business backlash.
The Constitution Still Applies
There is another dimension often overlooked in discussions about deportation: constitutional law. Undocumented immigrants are not outside the legal system. They are entitled to due process protections under the U.S. Constitution. The Supreme Court has long recognized that non-citizens physically present in the United States have rights under the Fifth Amendment.
In practical terms, this means deportation is not simply an administrative act. It requires legal proceedings—hearings, evidence, and adjudication. That process is already strained. Respecting it doesn’t mean going soft; it means streamlining courts with more judges and faster procedures so enforcement can hit hard where it matters most—on criminals, security threats, and recent violators—without backlogs becoming a de facto shield.
A country committed to the rule of law cannot bypass the courts when it becomes inconvenient. Nor can it let the pursuit of perfection turn due process into paralysis.
A System Never Built for This
Calling the immigration system “broken” suggests that it once functioned properly and then failed. That’s not quite right. The system evolved over time, reacting to political pressures and economic needs. The result is a patchwork that was never designed to deliver perfect control over millions living outside formal status for decades. To draw an analogy, the fact that criminal law does not catch every criminal is no reason to call for its cancellation or perfection. We must do the best we can, knowing full well that cancellation is ridiculous and perfection is not possible. The same holds true for immigration law. We must remove real criminals, but also deal with the rest in a humane and legal way.
A Different Direction
The United Kingdom, for example, is tightening rules while exploring “earned settlement” approaches that tie permanent residence more closely to economic contribution, integration, and long-term participation—raising the bar for new arrivals while acknowledging what people do after they arrive also matters. It is not a perfect system. But it reflects a key truth: immigration is not just about how people arrive—it’s also about what they do after they arrive. The most durable solutions combine firm enforcement with realistic recognition of rooted lives.
The Choice Ahead
The United States faces a choice. It can continue to pursue an enforcement strategy that is costly, disruptive, and unlikely to achieve its stated goals. Or it can adopt a more grounded approach—one that recognizes long-term presence, respects constitutional protections, and creates a pathway for those who have already demonstrated their commitment to life in the country. This is not about abandoning the rule of law. It is about aligning the law with reality.
Final Thought
You cannot deport your way to perfection. Trying to do so does not strengthen the rule of law—it strains and distorts it. The real task is not to build a flawless system that removes every last person outside of formal status. It is to build one that actually works: firm where it must be, practical where it has to be, and effective in the end.