USAID money dried up, now European MEPs chant “Send Them Back”. By Hélène de Lauzun at The European Conservative.
The announcement of the European Parliament’s final vote on the Return Directive was met with a burst of jubilation in the chamber, where energetic cries of “Send them back” rang out, reflecting the MEPs’ enthusiasm at having succeeded in passing the first genuine measure to seriously restrict immigration at the European level. On the opposite side of the chamber, MEPs responded to these exclamations with vigorous — though minority — cries of “Shame on you.”
The choice of words is not insignificant; some even see it as a foreshadowing — still a fantasy at this stage — of remigration.
Through a number of key measures, the directive drastically changes the landscape for the management of illegal immigration. Previously, an obligation to leave the territory remained a national decision. From now on, thanks to the Return Regulation, these decisions may be converted into a ‘European Return Order’ — an obligation to leave European territory. …
On the Left as well as in the centre, the prevailing mood was one of exaggeration and dramatisation. Abir Al-Sahlani, a left-wing MEP from the Renew group, said she had never felt “as unsafe in Parliament as she did after the vote.”
Europe just experienced one of the fastest religious conversions in political history.
For years they called basic border enforcement “fascism.” They called deportation “cruel.” They called any suggestion of returning people who had no right to be there “far-right extremism.” NGOs and center-left politicians treated the very idea of stopping the invasion like it was a moral crime. They cashed the checks, ran the programs, and lectured the rest of us about compassion while the flow continued.
Then something changed.
Voters started punishing them. The American money tap (that sweet USAID slush fund) got turned off. And suddenly the same people who spent a decade calling enforcement racist are passing the strictest migration law in EU history … complete with return hubs in third countries, expanded detention powers, and home raids without warrants.
The same ministers who once clutched their pearls are now hugging each other on the parliament floor while chanting “send them back.”
It’s almost like none of it was ever about principle.
It was about cost. When open borders started costing them elections and free American money, the moral clarity arrived overnight. The “compassion” dried up the second it threatened their power and their funding. Everything before that? Just expensive theater paid for by someone else’s taxpayers.
They didn’t have a change of heart. They got hit in the wallet and at the ballot box at the same time. And like every other elite class in history, they immediately discovered that reality is suddenly very interesting when it starts hurting them personally.
Three things made these surprising “historic” reforms possible:
First, “far-right” (moderate conservative) parties have been ascendant in Europe, a trend that accelerated after President Trump’s re-election last year. Conservative and “reform” parties now make up about a third of all elected EU members.
Second, center-left parties — also about a third — joined the conservatives to pass the new anti-migration policies. Only the far-left parties (Greens and socialists) opposed the new package and shouted “shame!” at their colleagues after the vote passed. …
Third, the center-left’s course correction from pro-migrant virtue-signaling to pro-sanity common sense followed continuous pressure from the U.S. over the last 18 months, which ceaselessly argued that Europe was destroying itself with its open-borders migration policies, and often linked them to America’s pullback from NATO. … A majority of EU voters now want ICE-like migration policies.
You might fairly ask why I linked this political tipping point in Europe to Trump’s re-election. After all, as the experts always remind us, correlation doesn’t prove causation. Maybe Trump’s election and the rise of sanity in Europe were both caused by some other third factor. To answer, I would point to one specific policy decision, the closure of USAID, and to one person, President Trump, over whom the EU leaders fawned at yesterday’s G7 Summit. …
Think-tank analysts estimate that up to $2.3 billion annually in U.S. aid ($23 billion every 10 years) was tied to Europe’s “migration management” work. USAID’s closure effectively zeroed this out, leaving a sudden, large gap in financing for development and protection projects in the countries of origin and transit.
In other words, USAID paid the countries where migrants came from, and it paid the countries through which they traveled on their way to Europe. No longer.
The USAID money spigot is closed. Now the EU is reversing those incentives — by paying origin countries to “host” their own migrants. And, whether it was through tariffs, NATO drawdowns, or energy markets, President Trump has beaten European politics in arm-wrestling.
Follow the money … all the way back to the American taxpayer.
Chaser:
For the first time, deportations from Austria are now outpacing new asylum applications.
An average of 40 people per day are being deported from Austria, with roughly 10 of these being for convicted criminals.https://t.co/pWE65mV8J2
— S 🇦🇲🇱🇧 (@Shifty_Coffee) June 20, 2026















