Soros-Linked Groups Were Behind Lawsuit “Blocking” Trump’s Tren de Aragua Deportation Flight
Fight tech tyranny. Join Silverloch on Rumble.

Photos by Getty Images
Days ago Donald Trump deported hundreds of Venezuelan Tren de Aragua members to El Salvador, a country that has gone from being one of the most violent on the planet to having a homicide rate about a third of the U.S.’s in just a few years by cracking down on gangs.
On his first day in office Trump signed an executive order initiating the process to designate various drug cartels and transnational gangs such as Tren de Aragua as Foreign Terrorist Organizations, and this was enacted on February 20.
It was a move by Trump that only a leftist could have a problem with - and they did.
U.S. District Judge James Boasberg issued an order to block the deportations Trump authorized under the Alien Enemies Act of 1789, but the gang members were already in the air over international waters when they intervened. El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele mocked the judge, posting to his X account “oopsie… too late” after he issued the order, and Trump has called for him (the judge) to be impeached.
The American Civil Liberties Union, Democracy Forward, and the ACLU of the District of Columbia were the ones who technically-successfully challenged the deportations. They’re now asking a federal court to look into whether or not the Trump admin violated the judge’s order.
To the surprise of few, both are tied to the Soros network.
The largest grant George had given to the ACLU was $50 million in 2014 (out of a budget that year of $133 million) to push to reduce jail sentences, with the goal of reducing the U.S. prison population 50% by 2020.
Democracy Forward, which has also been targeting the operations of Elon Musk’s DOGE, lists a number of clients and partners that are Soros funded. This includes Color of Change, which got a $3 million grant from the OSF on Alex’s watch, after receiving nearly $1.5 million in 2018-2019. Other groups that Democracy Forward lists as clients and partners include the Center for American Progress (of which a number of top members have worked in the Biden Administration), National Immigration Law Center as well as hundreds of thousands of dollars in funding to UnidosUS, Common Justice, and the Catholic Legal Immigration Network.
On his first day in office Trump signed an executive order initiating the process to designate various drug cartels and transnational gangs such as Tren de Aragua as Foreign Terrorist Organizations, and this was enacted on February 20.
It was a move by Trump that only a leftist could have a problem with - and they did.
U.S. District Judge James Boasberg issued an order to block the deportations Trump authorized under the Alien Enemies Act of 1789, but the gang members were already in the air over international waters when they intervened. El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele mocked the judge, posting to his X account “oopsie… too late” after he issued the order, and Trump has called for him (the judge) to be impeached.
The American Civil Liberties Union, Democracy Forward, and the ACLU of the District of Columbia were the ones who technically-successfully challenged the deportations. They’re now asking a federal court to look into whether or not the Trump admin violated the judge’s order.
To the surprise of few, both are tied to the Soros network.
The largest grant George had given to the ACLU was $50 million in 2014 (out of a budget that year of $133 million) to push to reduce jail sentences, with the goal of reducing the U.S. prison population 50% by 2020.
Democracy Forward, which has also been targeting the operations of Elon Musk’s DOGE, lists a number of clients and partners that are Soros funded. This includes Color of Change, which got a $3 million grant from the OSF on Alex’s watch, after receiving nearly $1.5 million in 2018-2019. Other groups that Democracy Forward lists as clients and partners include the Center for American Progress (of which a number of top members have worked in the Biden Administration), National Immigration Law Center as well as hundreds of thousands of dollars in funding to UnidosUS, Common Justice, and the Catholic Legal Immigration Network.
Photos by Getty Images