In an exclusive interview on The Alex Marlow Show podcast, President Trump’s Border Czar, Tom Homan, discussed his decision to rejoin the administration and his lifelong commitment to securing America’s southern border. Speaking with Breitbart Editor-in-Chief Alex Marlow in Washington, D.C., Homan reflected on the personal and professional challenges he has faced throughout his decades in immigration enforcement. He emphasized that his renewed service under President Trump stems from a deep belief that effective border control saves lives, both American and migrant, by deterring human smuggling and other violent crimes associated with illegal immigration.
Homan began his career with the U.S. Border Patrol in 1984 and rose through the ranks to become the first Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) director to have advanced from within the Department of Homeland Security. Over more than 35 years of service, he has worked under six U.S. presidents, from Ronald Reagan to Donald Trump, earning a reputation as a staunch advocate for stronger border enforcement and immigration control. Breitbart reported that, despite his long-standing nonpartisan record, Homan has become one of the most polarizing figures in the current administration, frequently targeted by critics who oppose the government’s hardline immigration policies.
During the interview, Homan spoke candidly about the personal toll his work has taken on him and his family. He revealed that he has not lived with his family for months because of ongoing death threats linked to his role in enforcing immigration law. Despite the dangers, Homan stated that he felt compelled to return to public service out of a sense of duty to the president and to the lives lost as a result of illegal border crossings. “It’s hard to say no to the president of the United States and help him fix something where thousands of lives have been lost,” he told Marlow, acknowledging both the “hate” directed toward him and the sacrifices made by his loved ones.
Homan also addressed what he views as the “human and social costs” of policies that promote mass immigration. Drawing on graphic personal experiences, he recounted tragic incidents that have shaped his perspective on border enforcement. He spoke of holding the bodies of dead children, interviewing young girls who had been raped by cartel handlers, and witnessing the aftermath of smuggling operations where migrants died in horrific conditions. These firsthand experiences, he said, have reinforced his belief that strict border control is not merely a political issue but a moral imperative aimed at preventing such tragedies.
Among the most emotional moments in the interview was Homan’s retelling of a case involving 19 migrants who died inside a tractor-trailer. He described arriving at the scene and seeing the bodies of men, women, and children who had suffocated or overheated inside the steel container. One image, in particular, has haunted him ever since — that of a five-year-old boy who died in his father’s arms. Homan recalled how many of the victims had stripped down to their underwear in a desperate attempt to find relief from the extreme heat, a memory that continues to fuel his determination to prevent similar disasters through stronger enforcement and deterrence policies.
Concluding the interview, Homan reflected on how decades of witnessing suffering and death along the border have shaped his worldview and professional mission. He said that critics who question his approach do not fully grasp the realities faced by migrants and border agents alike. For Homan, border security is inseparable from humanitarian responsibility — a means of saving lives rather than endangering them. His remarks underscore a broader debate within U.S. immigration policy: how to balance compassion for migrants with the necessity of maintaining law, order, and national security. In returning to serve under President Trump, Homan made clear that his resolve remains unshaken, guided by both personal conviction and a lifetime of difficult experience.