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ICE Imposes New Rules on Congressional Visits

June 19, 2025
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ICE Imposes New Rules on Congressional Visits
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The Department of Homeland Security has imposed new limits on visits by members of Congress and their staff to immigration enforcement facilities, intensifying a conflict between federal immigration officials and Democratic lawmakers.

In guidance released this month, Immigrations and Customs Enforcement asserts that it has broad power to “deny a request or otherwise cancel, reschedule or terminate a tour or visit” by lawmakers or their staff under a number of circumstances, including “operational concerns” or if “facility management or other ICE officials deem it appropriate to do so.”

Under existing law, members of Congress can make unannounced oversight visits to immigration facilities that “detain or otherwise house aliens.” But the new policy specifies that ICE field offices are not subject to those requirements. Detained immigrants have been held in some of those offices for days waiting for officials to process their cases.

The new protocol, updated since February, comes as Democratic lawmakers have repeatedly been denied access to ICE facilities this month as they try to conduct congressional oversight, and amid high-profile clashes between federal immigration officials and members of Congress.

Democratic lawmakers in California, Illinois and New York have been turned away from ICE facilities recently, sometimes after trying in vain for hours to gain access to buildings that they say they are authorized to visit.

Representative LaMonica McIver, Democrat of New Jersey, was charged with assault last month after an encounter with immigration officers outside a Newark detention center. And Senator Alex Padilla, Democrat of California, was shoved out of a room and handcuffed after trying to question Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, during a news conference last week.

Representative Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, the top Democrat on the Homeland Security Committee, criticized the new ICE policy as an attempt to skirt congressional oversight. In a statement, he said the new guidance was “an affront to the Constitution and Federal law.”

Mr. Thompson singled out the guidance on field offices, which he called a “smoke screen” to prevent members from visiting offices that “are holding migrants — and sometimes even U.S. citizens — for days at a time.”

Representatives for the Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The new guidance spilled into public view more clearly on Wednesday. In suburban Chicago, four Democratic representatives were denied access to an immigration processing facility in suburban Chicago where they believed immigrants were being held for days without access to lawyers.

Representatives Jerrold Nadler and Dan Goldman, Democrats of New York, were both denied access to an ICE office in Manhattan, even as an official acknowledged that detainees were held there overnight. Both men said they requested a visit in advance.

“We were told not to,” William Joyce, the deputy director of the New York ICE field office, told them during an exchange in the building’s lobby.

In an email to a congressional office this week, an ICE official said that federal immigration officials were “not facilitating any visits to ICE Field Offices or suboffices” currently because of their “high operations tempo,” according to a congressional aide who was not authorized to discuss the message publicly.

Democratic lawmakers have said that the Trump administration’s escalation is precisely the reason they want to visit facilities, and that the federal government’s large-scale immigration crackdown and accelerated deportation efforts demand more thorough oversight.

For months, Democrats have framed their efforts to access immigration detention and enforcement facilities as part of their constitutional duties to provide a check on the expansion of presidential power.

Under the new guidance, ICE also asks for at least 72 hours notice for a visit to its facilities. Existing guidance already required congressional staff to provide at least 24 hours notice before visiting a detention facility.

The agency also explicitly says that visitors cannot “have any physical or verbal contact with any person in ICE detention facilities” without prior approval, and that violating that policy could lead to tours being cut short.

Nate Schweber contributed reporting from New York.

Michael Gold covers Congress for The Times, with a focus on immigration policy and congressional oversight.

The post ICE Imposes New Rules on Congressional Visits appeared first on New York Times.

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