These raids werenโt meant to expel Mexican workers. Rather, once the detained workers arrived at the southern border, Border Patrol agents โlegalizedโ them by issuing them the necessary forms to reenter as authorized workers under the Bracero Program.
Swingโs operations created the illusion of border enforcement while satisfying agribusiness leaders, who had learned that legal workers were unlikely to complain about labor conditions.
Weapons of war and โcoyotesโ
Over the next few decades, the U.S. went through different phases related to demand for labor and migration trends. While migration levels remained pretty steady, the Border Patrolโs funding began to rise rapidly in the 1970s as public concern over immigration surged.
Flush with cash, the agency began buying Vietnam War-era aircraft, surveillance cameras and landing mats from private weapons manufacturers. This was the beginning of the militarization of the Border Patrol โ that is, the use of military-grade weapons and surveillance equipment in domestic immigration enforcement.
Militarizing border enforcement has led to increasing profits for weapons manufacturers like Elbit Systems and Lockheed Martin while exacerbating the Border Patrolโs existing culture of violence. Agents have been known to beat, torture and rape migrants โ including, as the news site the Intercept has reported, young girls. Between 1985 and 1990, Border Patrol agents shot and killed dozens of migrants seeking to cross the U.S.-Mexico border.
Crossing into the U.S. became more difficult in the 1990s and 2000s. Then, as now, improving border security was a bipartisan goal. Presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama all increased funding and investments in technology and personnel at the southern border. Federal funding for the Border Patrol grew tenfold between 1990 and 2009, from US $263 million to $2.7 billion, adjusted for inflation.
Rather than preventing migration, this crackdown led to the use of โcoyotes,โ or border-crossing guides.

A โcoyoteโ steers migrants to the U.S. side of the Rio Grande in an inflatable boat on the Texas border in March 2021.
Their fees climbed alongside the federal budget for border enforcement. Migrants I interviewed paid $500 to cross in 1992; those fees rose to nearly $5,000 by 2009. By the late 2010s, coyotes were enmeshed with organized crime. Their services now cost up to $10,000
These problems would likely be exacerbated under either Harrisโ or Trumpโs border plan.
History suggests that giving the Border Patrol ever more money, agents and higher-tech equipment only spurs more violence and lawlessness. Itโs a good way for politicians to score political points and for weapons manufacturers to boost their profits, but a beefed-up Border Patrol doesnโt necessarily help matters at the U.S.-Mexico border.

Ragini Shah has received funding from the Fulbright Foundation to conduct research that contributed to this article.
Source: The Conversation