Let's Talk All About Immigration (with Anna Gorisch)

Let's Talk All About Immigration (with Anna Gorisch)

Author: Justin Robert Young January 16, 2026 Duration: 1:16:08

The resignation of Madison Sheahan, an ICE deputy director to run for Congress might look like a routine political move, but it says more about the internal state of immigration enforcement than any press release. ICE is increasingly being pulled between two competing instincts: governing and performing. Tom Homan represents the former, focused on operational reality and risk management. Kristi Noem represents the latter, treating enforcement as a political identity meant to generate headlines and loyalty. Those approaches are not compatible, and when senior officials start eyeing exits into electoral politics, it usually means the institution itself is under strain.

On Capitol Hill, leadership is once again trying to stitch together a spending package just robust enough to avoid a shutdown. Progress exists, but only in the narrowest technical sense. Most discretionary funding is unresolved, and Homeland Security remains the pressure point. That is intentional. Immigration funding is leverage, and no one wants to give it up before extracting political value. The result is a familiar pattern: public urgency, private hesitation, and a quiet hope that the consequences land after the next recess.

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Meanwhile, a bipartisan proposal to create a strategic reserve of critical minerals is moving forward with little fanfare. It should be getting more attention than it is. Reducing reliance on China for rare earths and other key materials is not a culture war issue. It is basic national security planning. In a Congress addicted to short-term fights, this stood out as an example of lawmakers thinking beyond the next headline or election cycle.

Chapters

00:00:00 - Intro

00:02:56 - Interview with Anna Gorisch

00:27:17 - Update

00:28:16 - Senate Spending Package

00:29:27 - Madison Sheahan Resignation

00:32:20 - Mineral Reserve

00:33:27 - Interview with Anna Gorisch, con’t

01:13:44 - Wrap-up



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In a media landscape often defined by partisan shouting, Politics Politics Politics offers a different kind of conversation. Host Justin Robert Young brings a clear-eyed focus on the mechanics of power, cutting through the noise to examine the strategies, historical patterns, and personal ambitions that actually determine outcomes. This isn't about rehearsing talking points or telling you which side to be on. Instead, each episode digs into the tangible factors that signal who is positioned to succeed in a given race or policy fight and, crucially, the reasons behind that momentum. You'll find a blend of current news dissection and historical context, treating today's headlines as part of a longer story about how political power operates. The analysis aims for a straightforward clarity that feels increasingly rare, providing listeners with a foundational understanding of events that goes beyond the day's reactive hot takes. For anyone trying to make sense of the constant churn, this podcast serves as a reliable guide to the underlying forces at play.
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