A red town and the ramifications of ‘mass deportation now!’

They may not suddenly vote for Democrats, but the 10,000-bed ICE facility planned next door has them rethinking their support for Republicans.

Cities Under Siege — When the federal government turns your neighborhood into a detention zone, the whole community pays the price.

SOCIAL CIRCLE, Ga. — In this deeply conservative town east of Atlanta, a political realization is unfolding. What began as a distant policy debate in Washington has arrived, quite literally, in residents’ backyards.

Back in December, local officials learned through media reports that the Department of Homeland Security had quietly purchased a 1.2 million-square-foot warehouse in their little town with the intention of turning it into a mega detention center with capacity for up to 10,000 people.

In a town of about 5,000, the scale is staggering. 

Local leaders have scrambled to respond by organizing meetings, raising alarms about infrastructure strain and pressing federal officials for answers. Concerns include aging water lines, limited sewage capacity and the site’s proximity to the elementary school.

Months into those efforts, they are still waiting for DHS to answer their questions. They also say their Republican congressman and governor have been largely absent, unwilling to attend meetings, return calls or advocate on behalf of the very residents who overwhelmingly helped put them in office.

What lingers is a growing sense of abandonment among voters, many of whom are already questioning the people they have long supported as the 2026 midterms approach. They include many in Social Circle, where more than 70% of voters supported Donald Trump for president in 20162020 and 2024.

When policy hits home

Eric Hutcheson, a 21-year Air Force veteran and father of seven, bought a property in Social Circle in 2018 after retiring from the military, convinced he was buying his dream home.

“We came here with the intent of being in our retirement home, the place where we can raise our children,” said Hutcheson, standing beside the 2-acre pond on his land, which is partially filled with sediment from the construction of the warehouse that DHS now owns.

To read the full article, go to MS NOW

By Antonia Hylton, Kay Guerrero and Grace Cardinal on Apr. 20, 2026

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UB Center for Urban Studies

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