This is nothing new. It’s only new that Dems and the media get worked up about it, that is the removal of due process for deportees. According to the ACLU, three out of four deportees in the Obama era didn’t receive individualized due process. Ruhroh, Shaggy.
www.aclu.org
If your point is that both parties have mishandled immigration and due process, I agree. The ACLU was absolutely right to call out the Obama administration’s use of expedited removal. That criticism was valid then—and it’s still valid now.
But here’s the difference: acknowledging past failures doesn’t excuse present ones. If anything, it reinforces the need to demand better, regardless of who’s in charge. What’s happening now isn’t just “speed over fairness”—it’s outright defiance of a Supreme Court order and deporting people to black-site prisons in foreign countries. That’s a whole different level of dangerous.
So if you were genuinely concerned about due process back then, great—we’re on the same page. But if the only time it’s worth pointing out is when the other side is mad about it, then maybe the outrage isn’t about principle at all.
Not only were most Obama era deportees not charged with a crime, they were denied individualized due process, no court hearing, no face to face with a judge. It wasn’t news because Obama was Pres, not Trump.
When someone disappears, no one knows where they are. Doesn’t seem to fit this case. I hope he’s returned to the US for a formal deportation hearing if that would facilitate some real discussion on how best to move forward legally and humanely with the illegals who are already here.
This is textbook whataboutism—deflecting from the current crisis by pointing to Obama-era stats that have nothing to do with what’s happening right now. Yes, the ACLU rightly criticized expedited removals under Obama. That was a failure. But citing one failure doesn’t justify another—especially when the new one involves ignoring a Supreme Court order and sending people who’ve never been charged with a crime to foreign prisons built for terrorists.
That’s not enforcement. That’s a constitutional breakdown.
And let’s be honest: if there hadn’t been public outrage, Garcia would still be buried in CECOT. No transparency. No oversight. No legal recourse. That’s not due process—it’s a disappearance. And the last thing this administration wants is for someone like Garcia to come back and testify publicly about what was done to him. That’s why they’re stalling.
You say you hope he gets a formal hearing? So do I. That’s literally what the court ordered. And the executive branch has refused to follow through.
Have I not been saying all along that real laws should be passed to fix this mess? That’s the only durable solution—not executive orders, not political stunts, and definitely not ignoring court rulings.
If we can’t agree that court orders must be followed and due process matters—even for people we don’t personally sympathize with—then let’s stop pretending this is about law and order. It’s not. It’s about power—and who we’re willing to let abuse it.