In a move that could redefine the landscape of immigration enforcement in the United States, Tennessee is poised to implement a series of controversial bills that would empower state and local authorities to act as extensions of federal immigration agencies. Spearheaded by Stephen Miller, a former advisor to Donald Trump, these proposals aim to criminalise the presence of undocumented individuals and enforce strict compliance with ICE protocols, raising significant constitutional concerns.
The Legislative Package
Earlier this month, Tennessee’s House Speaker, Cameron Sexton, unveiled a suite of eight bills conceived in collaboration with Miller during meetings in Washington D.C. These legislative measures would turn everyday professionals—including police officers, teachers, and social workers—into de facto agents of federal immigration enforcement. The implications are profound: under this proposed framework, the mere presence of an undocumented person with a final deportation order would be classified as a state crime, obligating officials to report such individuals to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
“President Trump is on our side,” asserted Jason Zachary, the deputy speaker from Knoxville, in a video shared with a conservative audience. “Tennessee will lead the way.” This declaration signals a determined push to establish Tennessee as a testing ground for state-led immigration enforcement, reflecting a broader strategy by the Trump administration to decentralise immigration control.
Erosion of Accountability
While Tennessee has previously established an immigration enforcement division under its Department of Safety and Homeland Security, the proposed legislation takes transparency to the extreme. One bill seeks to criminalise the release of information regarding immigration enforcement activities, threatening felony charges and removal from office for public officials who disclose such details.
Lisa Sherman-Luna, executive director of the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee