Biden’s Treasonous Sabotage Exposed, Stopped

Joe Biden
BIDEN'S PLOT EXPOSED

Exposing Joe Biden’s attempt to sabotage President Donald Trump’s border security agenda, border wall materials sold off at bargain prices by the Biden administration are now being returned to the federal government.

Story Highlights

  • GovPlanet agrees to return previously auctioned border wall materials “at-cost” to the Trump administration.
  • Biden sold surplus steel bollards and panels at “pennies on the dollar” in late 2024.
  • Trump’s H.R. 1 provides tens of billions for border wall completion, with hundreds of miles planned.
  • Material transfers to be expedited over 90 days to a third-party construction contractor.
  • DHS reports record-low border encounters as wall construction resumes under new funding.

Biden’s Last-Minute Border Wall Fire Sale Reversed

GovPlanet, the federal surplus contractor that auctioned border wall components during the Biden administration’s final months, announced it reached an agreement with the Office of the Border Czar to return previously sold materials to the federal government.

The company stated materials would be transferred “at-cost” and expedited over the next 90 days to a third-party construction firm under government contract.

This reversal comes after significant criticism that the timing of late 2024 auctions was designed to hamper the incoming Trump administration’s ability to restart border wall construction quickly.

Massive New Funding Enables Wall Construction Surge

The Trump administration’s border security efforts received a major boost through H.R. 1, dubbed the “Big Beautiful Bill,” which allocated tens of billions for border enforcement and wall construction.

According to DHS’s July 2025 six-month report, the department has 85-plus miles of wall planned or under construction from prior-year funds, with hundreds of additional miles to be funded by the new legislation.

This represents the largest border infrastructure investment since Trump’s first term, when his administration constructed and replaced hundreds of miles of primary and secondary barriers using DHS and reprogrammed Defense Department funds.

From Surplus Sales to Strategic Asset Recovery

The border wall materials saga began when Biden halted construction in 2021 and terminated the national emergency declaration, leaving significant stocks of steel bollards, panels, and related materials at staging sites across Arizona and other border states.

These components were later deemed surplus and auctioned through GovPlanet’s federal contracting channels. Critics argued the “pennies on the dollar” pricing represented potential taxpayer losses, though supporters cited storage and maintenance cost considerations as justification for disposal.

The material recovery effort demonstrates how quickly federal asset management can shift when administrations change priorities. Unlike typical contract cancellations during political transitions, the scale and symbolic importance of border wall components made this situation particularly high-profile.

The precedent of reversing surplus dispositions in response to policy changes may influence future disposal policies for materials deemed strategically important.

Border Security Results Drive Policy Validation

DHS’s six-month update emphasized wall completion as part of a comprehensive security strategy that includes expanded CBP staffing and enhanced surveillance technology.

The department claims record-low encounter figures in mid-2025 as evidence that deterrence and operational measures are working effectively.

This data supports the administration’s argument that physical barriers, combined with increased personnel and technology, create a multi-layered approach to border security that produces measurable results in reducing illegal crossings.

The broader implications extend beyond immediate construction projects, as H.R. 1 also provides substantial federal grants and reimbursements to states for border enforcement activities.

Texas stands to receive significant funding for Operation Lone Star, potentially reshaping federal-state relationships in border management and creating more durable enforcement partnerships that could outlast future political changes.

Sources:

American Immigration Council – What’s in the Big Beautiful Bill?

DHS – Six Months of Keeping America Safe Under President Trump and Secretary Noem

The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights – Project 2025: What’s at Stake for Immigrants’ Rights

NYC Bar Association – The Trump Administration’s 2025 Changes to Immigration Law