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BREAKING🚨 Trump just yanked $11 million from Miami Catholic Charities, threatening to shut down a shelter that’s cared for migrant kids since the days of Castro.

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BREAKING🚨 Trump just yanked $11 million from Miami Catholic Charities, threatening to shut down a shelter that’s cared for migrant kids since the days of Castro.

In Washington, this is a line item. In Miami, it’s a locked door and a child’s suitcase on the curb.

The administration has abruptly canceled an $11 million federal contract with Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Miami, money that keeps the Children’s Village open for unaccompanied migrant kids.

This isn’t just any facility. Its roots go back more than sixty years, to Operation Pedro Pan, when over 14,000 Cuban children fled Castro and found safety on U.S. soil with the help of the Church.

That history is being tossed aside in a single budget move.

The shelter today has 81 beds. Behind that number are kids from Cuba, Haiti, Central America, and beyond who crossed borders without parents, fleeing gangs, collapse, or political crackdowns. They arrive with trauma, often after weeks of danger. The Children’s Village is one of the few places built to meet them with bilingual staff, foster placements, and therapists instead of razor wire and guards.

Miami Archbishop Thomas Wenski says the program will be forced to shut down in three months without the federal contract. Sixty years of partnership between Catholic Charities and the U.S. government, gone with a letter and a deadline.

Federal officials insist this is about “declining numbers.” They point to roughly 1,900 unaccompanied minors now in custody, compared to a peak of about 22,000 under the Biden administration, and say they’re closing and consolidating “unused facilities” as part of a push against illegal entry and human smuggling.

But walk through the halls of Children’s Village and you don’t see a surplus. You see kids doing homework at plastic tables, siblings reunited after weeks apart, a bulletin board with flights and bus tickets home to relatives. For children who’ve already lost everything once, getting uprooted again and shipped to yet another state-run facility isn’t an efficiency; it’s another fracture.

Experts like Robert Latham at the University of Miami warn that moving kids in care like this can be psychologically devastating, especially for those who have finally started to trust the adults around them. These aren’t numbers on a dashboard. They’re 9-year-olds who sleep better when they recognize the voice reading them a story at night.

The blowback in South Florida has scrambled the usual political lines. Republican Representatives MarĂ­a Elvira Salazar and Carlos A. Gimenez, both from districts shaped by Cuban and Haitian exile, are openly pressing the Office of Refugee Resettlement to reverse course.

They call the defunding a “strategic mistake,” pointing to fresh turmoil in Cuba and Haiti and warning that migration spikes are not a hypothetical here; they’re a recurring reality.

Their message is blunt: South Florida is always first in line when crisis hits the hemisphere. Gutting one of the longest-running shelters now, when the region is one coup or earthquake away from another wave of children at the airport, is the definition of shortsighted.

Layered over all of this is Trump’s intensifying clash with Pope Leo XIV, the first American pope, who has made criticism of U.S. immigration crackdowns and the war in Iran central to his public agenda.

For the Vatican, places like Children’s Village are proof that faith-based care can offer dignity where government systems often fail. For Trump, they’re now leverage in a very public fight with a pope who keeps calling him out.

So a decades-long partnership between Washington and the Church snaps, and dozens of kids in Miami are told their home is shutting down.

Some choices reveal themselves not in speeches, but in who gets cut when it’s time to score political points. Today, it’s an 81-bed shelter for children who crossed a border alone.

Three months on the clock. After that, the kids go wherever there’s space left.

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