Ted, a U.K. citizen who grew up in the United States and was recently deported, didn’t lash out at Immigration and Customs Enforcement. He didn’t claim victimhood. Instead, he did something rarely seen in today’s political climate: he took full responsibility.
“Unlawful presence after learning that I was unlawfully present, right? I’m not making excuses. I should have been deported,” Ted said in a widely shared interview with The Telegraph. “There is an illegal immigration crisis in America, and any president that wants a lawfully ordered nation has the right and the duty and the obligation to enforce deportation.”
That statement alone lit up social media, with many on the right praising what they saw as a blunt, honest acknowledgment of the rule of law.
But the controversy didn’t stop there.
Ted is now pushing back hard against how The Telegraph framed his story — accusing the outlet of lumping him into a narrative he flatly rejects.
The publication promoted the segment with a caption suggesting deported migrants sent to the U.K. were struggling and dissatisfied with government support. According to Ted, that portrayal couldn’t be further from his own position.
“I haven’t taken taxpayer money. I’m not asking for Keir Starmer to help me resettle,” he told the Daily Caller. “That’s never been my position.”
‘ICE deported me to Britain – it’s a dump’
Immigrants sent to the UK by the US say they lack support to survive in a strange land.
Watch the full report here
https://t.co/DujhUWZhK5 pic.twitter.com/muxEOR8T7X
— The Telegraph (@Telegraph) March 13, 2026
Should the U.S. deport individuals who are unlawfully present?
He says viewers who actually watched his full remarks saw something very different: a man accepting consequences, not demanding compensation.
Ted also addressed what he called broader misconceptions about his political identity. Despite being praised in conservative circles, he rejected the idea that he fits neatly into any partisan box.
“The misconception [is] that I’m like a Trump loyalist, MAGA cultist, staunch Republican,” he said. “That does not encapsulate the nuance of my political positions at all.”
Still, his past comments about the United Kingdom — including a viral TikTok where he harshly criticized life outside London — were folded into the coverage, reinforcing what he says is a misleading image.
According to Ted, the final impression painted by the media was of an ungrateful, self-unaware deportee. He insists the reality is the opposite.
“I was deported, and I think it was justified,” he explained, noting he spoke out during a time of heated protests against ICE. “I’m not here saying, ‘I hate Trump. I hate ICE.’”
In a political environment dominated by outrage and deflection, Ted’s message is cutting through precisely because it breaks the mold — and raises an uncomfortable question for critics of immigration enforcement.
What happens when someone on the receiving end says the system worked exactly as intended?














‘ICE deported me to Britain – it’s a dump’
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