The โDefend the Homelandโ recruitment drive is made possible by a funding boost from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is seeking to hire 10,000 additional agents and legal staff, offering signing bonuses of up to $50,000 and student loan forgiveness as part of a major recruitment drive amid steppedโup deportation operations.
In new postings on social media and its recruitment website, the agency highlighted openings for deportation officers, special agents, and attorneys in its Office of the Principal Legal Advisorโdescribed in the post as one of the federal governmentโs most prestigious legal divisions.
ICEโs recruitment pitch stresses integrity, courage, and physical fitness, citing a mission to combat crossโborder crime and illegal immigration that โthreaten national security and public safety.โ
โServe your country! Defend your culture!โ an Aug. 5 post by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) states, noting that some enforcement roles do not require an undergraduate degree.
In an Aug. 4 appearance on Fox News, acting ICE Director Todd Lyons said heโs โecstaticโ to see a surge of applicants for various positions since DHS launched the initiativeโdubbed โDefend the Homelandโโseveral days ago.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, in a Julyโฏ29 statement launching the initiative, urged Americans to join ICEโs mission to remove the nationโs most dangerous alien offenders.
โYour country is calling you to serve at ICE. In the wake of the Biden administrationโs failed immigration policies, your country needs dedicated men and women of ICE to get the worst of the worst criminals out of our country,โ Noem said. โThis is a defining moment in our nationโs history. Your skills, your experience, and your courage have never been more essential. Together, we must defend the homeland.โ
The ICE hiring spree is made possible by a massive cash infusion from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act package President Donald Trump signed in July. It sets aside about $170 billion for border security and immigration enforcement over five years, including $76.5 billion for ICE aloneโnearly 10 times the agencyโs current annual budget. Of that amount, $45 billion will expand detention capacity, and nearly $30โฏbillion will fund the hiring of 10,000 additional staff to help the agency reach its target of 1โฏmillion deportations a year.
By Tom Ozimek