A Judge *Did What Now* Regarding That Deported Illegal Alien Case
Marjorie Taylor Greene Made a Stock Trade – Now Democrats Are Clamoring for...
ABC News Deceives About the Shapiro Arsonist, While the Media Continue Lying About...
South Carolina Lawmakers Consider Atoning for Past Sins Against Second Amendment
Here We Go Again: Joe Biden Spends His First Public Address Since Leaving...
Van Hollen Enjoys Praise From Jeffries As He Continues to Fight for Deported...
Tom Homan Vows to Prosecute Anyone Harboring Illegal Immigrants 'To the Full Extent...
Trump Admin Refers NY AG Letitia James for Possible Prosecution Over Mortgage Fraud...
Democrat Sounds Alarm: Under Trump, No American Is Safe from Abduction, Deportation, or...
Grenell: Illegal Status Led to Abrego Garcia’s Deportation
Media Gave 62 Times More Coverage to Trump Tariffs Than Booming Jobs Report
California Bill Lets Students Sleep In Cars; Critics Call It a Band-Aid for...
American Students Trapped In Denmark After Uber Dispute Leads to Arrest, Passport Seizure
Pam Bondi Fires Off on the So-Called ‘Maryland Man’ Who Got Deported
Trump White House Directs Congress to Defund NPR, PBS
Tipsheet

Trump's Latest Immigration Move Just Drove Out Another Key Leader

AP Photo/Stephanie Scarbrough

The Internal Revenue Service’s (IRS) acting director is reportedly stepping down over the prospect of sharing illegal immigrants’ tax data with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to apprehend those who entered the country illegally.

Advertisement

President Donald Trump unveiled the plan in March, announcing that an agreement between the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the IRS would enable ICE to request information on people suspected of living in the country illegally.

As the deal is being finalized, Acting IRS Commissioner Melanie Krause will be leaving the Trump administration, according to The Washington Post.

Acting IRS commissioner Melanie Krause — the tax agency’s third leader since President Donald Trump’s inauguration — will participate in the deferred resignation program the Trump administration offered to agency employees in recent days, said the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal.

Disagreements over the agency’s direction also factored into Krause’s decision to leave, the people said.

Losing three agency leaders in three months is “unprecedented,” one of the people said. “I don’t think we’ve seen anything like this at IRS.”

Treasury Department officials in recent days sought to circumvent IRS executives so immigration authorities could access private taxpayer information, the people said. Those conversations largely excluded Krause’s input.

Krause learned about the deal after the Treasury Department released the details to Fox News.

The acting commissioner grew frustrated at her inability to push back against the Department of Government Efficiency’s (DOGE) efforts to cut staff while overhauling the agency’s technology infrastructure. A source told The Post that Krause “no longer feels like she’s in a position where she can impact the decision-making that’s happening.”

Advertisement

Krause is not the first acting director to resign due to the Trump administration’s agenda, NBC News noted.

The IRS has been in upheaval over Trump administration decisions to share taxpayer data. Acting Commissioner Douglas O’Donnell announced his retirement from the agency after roughly 40 years of service in February as furor spread over Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency gaining access to IRS taxpayer data. Krause replaced him.

President Trump in February announced plans to have IRS agents aid in the administration’s mass deportation efforts. Earlier, he had suggested sending almost 90,000 agents to the southern border to help immigration authorities round up illegal aliens trying to gain entry into the country.

A memo dated February 7 revealed that Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem tasked Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent with deputizing law enforcement personnel, including IRS agents, to aid in immigration enforcement efforts. IRS agents are often armed and possess the authority to make arrests, making them suitable candidates to support the president’s deportation initiatives.

IRS agents also have access to information databases for businesses and individuals through its audit functions, which allows them to enforce the ban on hiring illegal immigrants. A William Mitchell law review highlighted that using IRS agents to address illegal immigration shifts the cost of deportation onto those profiting from bringing illegal immigrants to the U.S. rather than burdening taxpayers. It also noted that the approach could strengthen enforcement by incentivizing informants, encouraging civilians to report violations, and helping enforce the law.

Advertisement

Krause’s resignation will be the latest in a long line of people who have decided to leave their jobs amid Trump’s shakeup of the executive branch. Many have taken the administration’s offer to resign while receiving a payout. There will likely be more to come as Trump ramps up his policies.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement