US draws up plans to halt immigration, customs processing at 'sanctuary city' airports


U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Markwayne Mullin delivers remarks at an event honoring fallen police officers and federal agents at ICE Headquarters in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 13, 2026. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

WASHINGTON, May 26 (Reuters) - U.S. ⁠Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin said the Trump administration is drawing up plans to stop ⁠processing international travelers and cargo at major U.S. airports in "sanctuary cities" that have declined ‌to cooperate with an immigration crackdown.

The move could effectively halt international air travel and commerce at major airports in Democratic states, with millions of foreign tourists expected to stream in for next month's start of the FIFA World Cup.

Mullin told Fox News ​Channel's Sean Hannity in an interview broadcast on Tuesday that ⁠he had met White House officials but ⁠emphasized no decision had been made whether to proceed.

"We are currently - which we're not initiating yet - but ⁠we're ‌currently drawing up plans," Mullin said.

"We shouldn't be processing international flights into their cities," he added, in a reference to sanctuary cities, where he suggested "local radical left Democrats aren't allowing us ⁠to do our job and enforce federal laws."

Last week, Reuters ​and other media reported that Mullin ‌had privately told U.S. travel executives his department could opt to stop customs and immigrations ⁠processing of international ​travelers.

The U.S. Justice Department published a list of so-called sanctuary cities and states that included many cities with major international airports.

Among these were Boston, Denver, Philadelphia, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York City, Newark, Seattle and San Francisco.

Mullin first ⁠publicly made the threat in April during a dispute ​over funding for his department but said on Tuesday the idea was under active consideration.

Democrats say reforms are needed to rein in abuses by Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection (CBP), including the killing ⁠of two U.S. citizens in Minneapolis in January.

The U.S. Travel Association, which represents major airlines, hotels, car rental firms and other travel companies, told Reuters on Friday its representatives had met Mullin.

Mullin "confirmed his previous comments that the administration is considering a withdrawal of CBP officers from international airports in certain sanctuary ​cities," U.S. Travel added in a statement to Reuters.

It also flagged the ⁠devastating consequences for the travel industry and communities dependent on international visitors.

More than 50 million international travelers arrived ​at the three major New York airports alone last year.

Reducing ‌customs staffing at major airports would disrupt operations significantly ​for carriers, travelers and the flow of international cargo, Airlines for America, a grouping of major passenger and cargo airlines, said last week.

(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

Trump-endorsed Paxton topples Cornyn in Texas Senate race
US kills one man in strike in Eastern Pacific
Russia allows central bank, top bank Sberbank to directly down drones
Brazil senator and presidential contender Flavio Bolsonaro meets Trump at White House
North Korea tests AI-guided missiles and artillery rockets designed for modern warfare, KCNA says
Mexico deals "significant" blows to organized crime: official
Canada introduces temporary border measures over Ebola concerns
Roundup: Inflation, regional tensions cast shadow over Egypt's Eid al-Adha livestock market
Britain's shop prices grow by 1.2 pct in May amid rising costs: BRC
U.S. stocks close mixed after Micron soars

Others Also Read