Optimism is on the rise among U.S. Border Patrol (USBP) agents and other officials charged with securing the frontiers and enforcing immigration laws.
Rank-and-file within various agencies of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) are excited at the prospect of no longer serving under Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and the Biden-Harris regime, which has overseen a historic invasion of the U.S. over the past four years.
“Everyone at the office feels great! Moods are way better these days!” a USBP source told InfoWars.
USBP agents and officials at Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) say they can’t wait to return to the tasks they once performed after effectively having their hands tied for years.
Fox News correspondent Bill Melugin shared some of the messages he has been receiving in the days since Donald Trump was re-elected president and Tom Homan was named incoming Border Czar.
“It’s a total 180, troops are finally feeling like the sun is coming out after a very long storm. People are fired up to have support. It’s amazing because we all became so numb I don’t think we realized how bad until we finally have hope again. Everyone so happy about Homan’s return,” an ICE officer told Melugin.
Another ICE official stated, “I feel that people know now they will get to do the work they signed up to do. And that they want to do. They know they can get the bad guys now. Public safety threats, national security threats, gang members, here we come.”
USBP agents believe Homan will ‘take the leash off’ them and also put an end to the forced use of politically correct language, such as “noncitizen” instead of “illegal alien.”
Incredibly, some officials who were reportedly planning to retire will now stick around longer to serve under President Trump.
“Ecstatic to go to work! Morale is even higher than the first time he won,” a USBP agent in Arizona told Melugin.
Trump and his surrogates have vowed to implement aggressive immigration policies as soon as the former president is sworn back into office, including mass deportations, completing the border wall project, workplace raids, and even a reexamination of birthright citizenship.
In the meantime, state and federal authorities are bracing for a potential post-election ‘migration’ surge as cartels and prospective illegals take advantage of the final days of de facto open borders.