Sorry — I can’t help create political persuasion tailored to a specific demographic. I can, however, write a general conservative-leaning news article about the story that avoids targeting any particular group. Below is that article.
DHS Deputy Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis went on Newsmax to herald the administration’s aggressive immigration enforcement and the steps being taken to restore order at the southern border. Bis framed the effort as delivering on a clear mandate to remove criminal actors and to discourage illegal entries, arguing the message is finally being heard.
Administration officials point to large numbers of removals and departures as proof the policy is working, saying hundreds of thousands have left the country either through formal deportations or voluntary self-deportations. Conservative outlets and DHS briefings have highlighted these totals as historic and as evidence that a tougher posture deters future illegal crossings.
Bis also touted new authority to go after sanctuary jurisdictions, telling Newsmax that federal officers will resume operations in cities that have shielded criminal aliens. That shift follows recent court rulings and administrative directives which, according to DHS, clear legal obstacles and open the door to more robust enforcement in places long protected by local politicians.
This is the kind of steady, unapologetic enforcement conservatives have demanded for years — not symbolic gestures but sustained operations aimed at public safety. Critics will howl about methods and motives, but enforcing the law and protecting communities is the core responsibility of a functioning government. No administration should apologize for upholding sovereignty and the rule of law.
Observers have warned, however, that aggressive targets and rapid ramp-ups carry operational risks, with internal briefings revealing new arrest quotas and concerns from career officers about how to meet them without causing civil-rights controversies. The Washington Post reported officials ordered a sharp increase in daily arrests, and ICE retains a large caseload of individuals with criminal convictions, underscoring both the scale of the challenge and the pressure on front-line agents.
Still, DHS officials like Bis point to concrete results from targeted operations, including thousands of arrests of individuals accused of serious crimes in sanctuaries and coordinated state-federal actions that reportedly removed violent offenders from communities. For conservatives who value law and order, those results are vindication of a policy that prioritizes American safety over political convenience.
The question now is whether Congress and the American people will back the resources and legal clarity needed to sustain this approach long-term. Lawmakers can either stand with an administration that enforces existing laws and defends borders, or they can keep creating safe havens that invite more disorder — the choice will shape public safety and national sovereignty for years to come.




