
Inside House Republicans' new task force to battle criminal Mexican cartels
EXCLUSIVE: Successfully ridding the U.S. of the effects of Mexico's criminal cartels operating along the southwestern border would be a 20-year ordeal, Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas, said – but argued Congress could begin having an impact in a matter of weeks to months.
"Look, there's places we can boost right now to help the administration – the administration is refocusing a lot of efforts, especially in the [Department of Defense (DOD)], on the cartel situation, but there's no extra money for that. That is something we could produce in reconciliation," Crenshaw told Fox News Digital.
"I already know what programs need to be boosted, I just need to know the numbers. And that will come from [the Office of Management and Budget] that'll come from the Department of Homeland Security, it'll come from the DOD, it'll come from [Department of Justice]. And so over the next couple of weeks, even while we're in recess, we're working on getting those numbers."
Fox News Digital spoke with Crenshaw days after he was tapped to lead a new task force on combating Mexico's drug cartels. It's operating under the House permanent select committee on intelligence, which Crenshaw sits on.
He said it differs from his initiative last year, a similar task force, albeit with few resources to execute his goals, according to the congressman.
"Last year's cartel task force didn't have any staff. We were a series of members conducting hearings, investigations," Crenshaw said. "I think we're past that stage at the moment. Now, what I lead is really the House's effort to actually create some legislation to combat the cartels."
He added that the intelligence panel was "the right place for it" given "a lot of the work we do is classified."
"So the goal here is to actually get some outcomes as opposed to continuing more hearings, continuing more investigation. I've got a pretty good outline of what needs to happen. We've got President Trump in the White House now, who wants to make it happen," Crenshaw said.
"Another huge difference between now and last year is we have a Mexican administration under President Sheinbaum, who also wants to make it happen and take the fight to the cartels."
That fight would largely be a two-phase approach, Crenshaw explained. The first would be funding, while the second would entail "additional authorities and laws that need to be changed" to combat what the Texas congressman likened to "a terrorist insurgency" within the U.S.' close neighbor and trading partner.
"That means boosting up certain funding lines in existing authorities, especially places like the Department of Defense. You know, NORTHCOM owns this area of operation when it comes to Canada, the U.S. and Mexico. They're going to need extra resources because we're going to need to do a lot more training on Mexican special forces," he said.
Crenshaw called for sending military-grade gear to forces at the border, including Blackhawk helicopters, and bolstering reconnaissance and intelligence-gathering efforts.
"Things they really don't have and that currently cause them to be outgunned by these pretty massive militias that have unlimited funding and are ruthless in the way that they terrorize the Mexican population," Crenshaw explained. "So there's a lot to do there."
He's hoping the funding can largely be allocated through the budget reconciliation process, a means for Republicans to pass a massive conservative policy overhaul while totally sidelining Democrats.
They can do so because reconciliation brings the Senate's passage threshold down from 60 votes to 51, provided the legislation deals with taxation, spending or the national debt.
Republicans are looking to increase funding for President Donald Trump's border initiatives, but it's not immediately clear what shape that will take.
The contours of that plan will become clear in the next several weeks, with lawmakers returning from a two-week recess at the end of this month.
But House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said his full faith was in Crenshaw to execute the task force's goals.
"Now it is the responsibility of Congress to ensure this good work can continue by providing the President with the tools he needs to dismantle the drug cartels for good," Johnson said in a statement. "No one has worked harder on this important issue than Congressman Crenshaw, and I am grateful he is willing to continue leading at this pivotal time."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Politico
29 minutes ago
- Politico
Navy set to rename ship honoring Harvey Milk amid DEI purge
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is set to rename a naval vessel named after gay rights activist Harvey Milk, with several other ships honoring civil rights activists and women also potentially being rechristened. The move targeting the ship named after the gay rights icon comes as LGBTQ+ communities kick off pride month celebrations across the country. The step furthers Hegseth's agenda to stomp out DEI initiatives at the Pentagon, which has included removing books from service academies and scrubbing some mentions of women and people of color in the armed services from DOD websites. Two defense officials, who were granted anonymity to discuss a situation that is still evolving, said that USNS Harvey Milk name change will likely be announced around June 13, and that six other John Lewis-class replenishment and resupply ships — all named after civil rights leaders and prominent women — could also be renamed in the coming weeks and months. The officials said that more ships might follow in the coming months. and CBS News first reported some details of the plans. 'Secretary Hegseth is committed to ensuring that the names attached to all DOD installations and assets are reflective of the Commander-in-Chief's priorities, our nation's history, and the warrior ethos,' Sean Parnell, the chief Pentagon spokesperson, said in a statement. 'Any potential renaming(s) will be announced after internal reviews are complete.' The other ships in the class are the USNS Thurgood Marshall, USNS Ruth Bader Ginsburg, USNS Harriet Tubman, USNS Cesar Chavez, USNS Medgar Evers, USNS Dolores Huerta and the USNS Lucy Stone. There is no timeline yet for the renaming of these ships, one of the officials said. Milk served in the Navy before his political career. He was assassinated in 1978. The planned erasure of barrier-shattering historical figures from the vessels is just the latest move in Hegseth's mission to stamp out any trace of diversity, equity and inclusion in the Defense Department. Previous efforts in that direction have proven controversial for Hegseth, who came under scrutiny for stripping mentions of key figures from military websites — including baseball legend and World War II veteran Jackie Robinson — eventually prompting the reinstatement of some webpages and even eliciting an admission of error from the Department of Defense. California politicians quickly criticized the Navy's planned renaming. Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), who shares a home city of San Francisco with Milk, sharply criticized the move as a 'shameful, vindictive erasure of those who fought to break down barriers for all to chase the American Dream' in a statement on Tuesday. 'Our military is the most powerful in the world – but this spiteful move does not strengthen our national security or the 'warrior' ethos. Instead, it is a surrender of a fundamental American value: to honor the legacy of those who worked to build a better country,' Pelosi said, encouraging the Navy to 'reconsider this egregious decision.' 'Stripping his name from a Navy ship won't erase his legacy as an American icon,' Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom said in a statement, 'but it does reveal Trump's contempt for the very values our veterans fight to protect.'
Yahoo
31 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Man pleads guilty in federal court to using fake social security to get state ID
(WKBN) — A man arrested in January for trying to use a fake Social Security card to get a state ID pleaded guilty Tuesday in federal court. Diego Lopez Gomez, 33, entered his pleas before U.S. Judge Donald C. Nugent in the U.S. Northern District Court of Ohio to a bill of information charging him with possession of a fraudulent permanent resident card. He was sentenced to time served and three years probation, but also ordered to turn himself in to federal immigration officials to be deported. A criminal complaint in the case was filed Jan. 31 in federal court, a day after Lopez Gomez was arrested by Boardman police at the Department of Motor Vehicles on Boardman-Canfield Road. Police were called by an employee of the BMV who said a man later identified as Lopez Gomez had fake documents he tried to give to the employee to get a state identification card. Lopez Gomez presented a Social Security card that was fake, reports said. Reports said Lopez Gomez told police he worked at a local Mexican restaurant, and he gave officers a paystub and a W2 from there. Police consulted authorities with the Immigration and Customs Enforcement, who asked that he be placed into custody. The criminal complaint was filed in federal court the next day. He had been held in federal detention since the complaint was filed. An affidavit accompanying the criminal complaint said the Social Security card and number Lopez Gomez tried to use was fake. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Trump and Melania to headline power-player packed Kennedy Center opening night
EXCLUSIVE: President Donald Trump, first lady Melania Trump, Vice President JD Vance and second lady Usha Vance will attend the opening night of the musical "Les Misérables" at the Kennedy Center next week, Fox News Digital has learned. "Les Misérables," one of the longest-running shows in Broadway and West End history, will have its opening night at the Kennedy Center on June 11. Grenell Developing 'Common Sense' Plan To Turn Kennedy Center Financials Around "I love the songs, I love the play," Trump told Fox News Digital Tuesday. "I think it's great — we may extend it." The president has famously played songs from "Les Misérables" at his rallies and events. "The Kennedy Center is coming back," the president told Fox News Digital. "It was not properly taken care of and we are taking it back and we are going to turn it back into something great." Read On The Fox News App Kennedy Center President Richard Grennell told Fox News Digital that "'Les Misérables' is proving to be a huge hit." "Opening night is going to be electric," Grennell told Fox News Digital. Kennedy Center Director Encourages Republican Attendance, Says 'Everyone Is Welcome' Kennedy Center officials told Fox News Digital that there will be a red carpet for opening night and that select members of the media will be invited to attend. Officials also said that attendees of the opening-night performance will be encouraged to walk the red carpet. Meanwhile, Kennedy Center officials told Fox News Digital that the first two weeks of the performance are nearly sold out, exceeding $3 million in ticket sales at the box office and exceeding the typical sales timeline. "We expect sales to exceed all expectations, surpassing the previously defined goals," a Kennedy Center spokesperson told Fox News Digital. Meanwhile, sources told Fox News Digital that the president is committed to revitalizing the Kennedy Center, with some suggesting it should eventually be renamed "the Trump–Kennedy Center." The Kennedy Center has two affiliates — the National Symphony Orchestra and the Washington National Opera. The new leadership team is currently working on business plans with its affiliates to ensure the Kennedy Center has larger endowments and "greater sustainability."Original article source: Trump and Melania to headline power-player packed Kennedy Center opening night