WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump took to Fox News this morning to rail against what he said are "the worst immigration laws ever" and "loopholes" in the nation's immigration system.

Trump said the border is "like Disneyland" now that the administration's family separation policy had ended – a controversial policy he said is a deterrent against family migration. "Literally you have ten times more families coming up because they won't be separated from their children," Trump said. "It's a disaster."

Trump had called in for an interview with Fox's Maria Bartiromo on "Sunday Morning Futures." Reporting on the El Paso side of the U.S.-Mexico border, Bartiromo cut away midway through the interview to show an immigrant family being detained by the Border Patrol. Bartiromo suggested that the group being detained might not be a real family.

Later in the interview, when asked if an immigration reform package would be debated or passed in 2019, the president did not give a specific time frame but alluded to a merit-based immigration package.

"We're going for a much bigger package. We're making a plan and talking about immigration laws on a much larger scale," he explained. "We need workers, we're doing a plan based on merit."

The president also criticized the immigration court system, which faces a large backlog of cases.

"What we need is new laws. ... We have a court system that has 900,000 cases behind it. In other words, they have a court that needs to hear 900,000 cases," Trump said. "It's just a situation Congress can fix ... and they don't get off their ass."

Trump did not give any specific policy proposals, though, that would address the issues he raised during the interview, despite speculation that the administration would attempt to take a harder line on limiting migration.

The administration had threatened to close the U.S.-Mexico border, but backed off on the threat at the beginning of April after an outcry from congressional and business leaders. President Trump had removed officials at the Department of Homeland Security who he saw as insufficiently tough on border security, including Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen.

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The administration's attempt to return asylum seekers to Mexico while their cases were adjudicated, also known as the "Remain in Mexico" program, was blocked by a federal judge on April 9.

Contributing: Alan Gomez