US Trump vows changes to immigration crackdown to protect migrant farmers, hotel workers - President Trump said he plans to make changes to his administration's aggressive crackdown on illegal immigration to address worker shortages

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news...t-farmers-hotel-workers-deported/84166061007/
https://archive.is/hZ0wJ
WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump said he plans to make changes to his administration's aggressive crackdown on illegal immigration to protect migrant farmers, hotel workers and others in the leisure industry who have been among those deported.

Trump promised the changes in a June 12 Truth Social post that acknowledged Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers have expanded arrests beyond just migrants convicted of violent crimes, who Trump officials have said are the primary targets of raids and deportations.

"Our great Farmers and people in the Hotel and Leisure business have been stating that our very aggressive policy on immigration is taking very good, long time workers away from them, with those jobs being almost impossible to replace," Trump wrote on the social media platform he owns.

He added that in many cases "Criminals allowed into our Country by the VERY Stupid Biden Open Borders Policy" are applying for these jobs.

"This is not good. We must protect our Farmers, but get the CRIMINALS OUT OF THE USA. Changes are coming!" Trump said.

The president did not specify what changes could be in store to address worker shortages caused by his immigration crackdown. Critics of Trump's mass-deportation agenda have long said migrants ‒ who tend to provide cheap labor by working for low wages ‒ are an essential part of the country's agriculture workforce.

About 42% of farm workers in the United States between 2020 and 2022 lacked legal status, according to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

“Our farmers are being hurt badly," Trump said during an event in the White House East Room when asked about his position. "You know, they have very good workers. They've worked for them for 20 years. They're not citizens, but they've turned out to be, you know, great."

Trump said he plans to sign an executive order to address the situation, adding that it will take a "common sense" approach. "We can't take farmers, take all their people and send them back because they don't have maybe what they're supposed to have, maybe not," Trump said.

The White House has defended deportations of non-violent migrants who are in the United States unlawfully, arguing their presence in the country is grounds for being deported.

Democrats seized on Trump's new posture. Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Washington, in a post on X, wrote: "Step 1: Trump creates a problem Step 2: Blames it on Joe Biden, who isn’t even president Step 3: Posts a rant about his solution — which doesn’t actually offer a solution."

Jayapal added: "Yes, our country and economy rely on immigrants. How is he just figuring that out?"

The Trump family's company, the Trump Organization, has a history of relying on labor from undocumented immigrants to staff Trump-owned hotels, the Washington Post reported in 2019, citing accounts from 48 former and current Trump workers. The migrants included hotel housekeepers, groundskeepers, waiters and stonemasons.

In recent weeks, ICE has dramatically expanded its deportation efforts after the White House demanded the agency increase its arrests of migrants in the country illegally, Reuters reported. Daily quotas have increased from 1,000 arrests per day to 3,000.

More: As ICE touts arrests, chaotic scenes emerge amid immigration crackdown
The shift has produced chaotic scenes across the country. Immigration authorities, wearing bulletproof vests and other tactical gear, recently raided a popular San Diego Italian restaurant.

ABC News published a video on June 11 showing ICE agents chasing down a farmer worker in a field in Ventura County, California, outside of Los Angeles, where Trump this week deployed National Guard troops to counter protests opposing the deportations.

More: Travel bans, visa crackdowns and deportations: What to know as Trump bars the door
Trump's border czar, Tom Homan, said in late May that the administration had deported around 200,000 people over four months ‒ a total that lags behind the deportations during a similar period under former President Joe Biden. The White House has said the discrepancy is the result of fewer migrants coming to the border.

Migrants seeking to cross the U.S.-Mexico border have dropped significantly during Trump's first five months of his second term. Border Patrol agents have seen their monthly encounters of migrant and asylum seeks drop to fewer than 10,000, down from more than 100,000 one year ago.
 
The Trump family's company, the Trump Organization, has a history of relying on labor from undocumented immigrants to staff Trump-owned hotels, the Washington Post reported in 2019, citing accounts from 48 former and current Trump workers. The migrants included hotel housekeepers, groundskeepers, waiters and stonemasons.
Oh yeah, that's an inconvenient little fact. I supposed the numbers were more manageable back then.
 
I know, I know I've let you down
I've been a fool to myself
I thought that I could
live for no one else
But now through all the hurt & pain
It's time for me to respect
the ones you love
mean more than anything
So with sadness in my heart
(I) feel the best thing I could do
is end it all
and leave forever
what's done is done it feels so bad
what once was happy now is sad
I'll never love again
my world is ending

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It all returns to nothing, it all comes tumbling down, tumbling down, tumbling down
It all returns to nothing, I just keep letting me down, letting me down, letting me down
In my heart of hearts
I know that I could never love again
I've lost everything
everything
everything that matters to me, matters in this world
 
We had so many illegals at the roach hotel I worked at.... no english, nothing. Police even used a guest room on the 2nd floor to bust spic sex traffickers one time on mid shift. These things weren't happening when I was growing up, yet for some reason, after all these illegals were imported, suddenly our crime started going up. Crazy coincidence maybe? Oy vey.... the replacement continues. They all have to go back, I don't give a fucking shit about Holiday Inn Express' bottom line.
 
Deport all the illegals.

The farms can find workers. People will be looking for work when food stamps and medicaid eligibility requires a certain amount of hours worked a week.

The hotels can probably train someone new to make beds and run a vacuum.

It doesn't seem to be a big problem when all the restaurants are closing down due to staff shortages and price increases. Why do we suddenly care if the hotel industry starts to fail?
 
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