There was joy in certain industries last Friday when Trump announced that ICE would stop raiding workplaces. He exempted farms, restaurants, meatpacking plants, and hotels, acknowledging that they needed their employees, and that these immigrants were hardworking and contributed to the economy.
His Agricultural Secretary Brooke Rollins apparently persuaded him.
But by Monday, he reversed course after Stephen miller got to him. TACO. Trump Always Chickens Out.
Industry and business groups that depend on immigrant workers are scrambling to respond to President Donald Trump’s heightened deportation efforts, after winning a partial reprieve on raids last week that was reversed days later.
The administration on Monday walked back a pause on immigration raids at farms, meatpacking plants, hotels and restaurants, sending renewed shock waves through the broader business community, parts of which are still pushing the White House for relief from workplace raids.
The pause had come after heavy lobbying efforts from farms, hotels and restaurants, as well as the meatpacking, construction, manufacturing, retail, elder care and dairy industries, among others, said Jennie Murray, president of the National Immigration Forum, an advocacy organization that represents Fortune 500 companies on Capitol Hill. Industries have lobbied lawmakers in Congress and White House officials.
“To see such a quick overturn, I think, was disheartening for many. A lot of these business and trade associations that need workforce solutions have been very supportive of the administration,” Murray said. “That’ll be something they continue to be disappointed about for a while.”
The American Farm Bureau Federation, the country’s powerful lobbying group for farmers, expressed “concern” that the policy had been reserved.
“President Trump recently emphasized agriculture faces unique circumstances that warrant a different approach to enforcement practices,” Zippy Duvall, the federation’s president, said in a statement Tuesday.
The policy reversal appeared to take effect immediately. On Tuesday, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents raided Delta Downs, a horse racing track in Vinton, Louisiana, rounding up nearly 100 equine caretakers, some of whom fled the scene as drones swarmed overhead, according to Eric J. Hamelback, chief executive of the National Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Association.
Hamelback said he had been under the impression that horse racing had been included in the administration’s agricultural carve-out. The group estimates that nearly 75 percent of its workforce is foreign-born, mostly from Latin America.
“The only change that we have to make is to get even more aggressive with both the administration and Congress,” Hamelback said, noting that his organization had been lobbying Washington lawmakers and the administration in recent weeks and months — including a meeting with Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky) in March.
The pause on workplace raids in agriculture and hospitality went out hours after Trump said in a post Thursday on his social media platform, Truth Social, that he was sympathetic to concerns that executives raised about his deportation plan. Trump wrote last week that “changes are coming” to help “protect our Farmers” from losing workers. However, a White House official told The Washington Post at the time that no actual policy changes were proposed by the White House.
The United Farm Workers union said in a statement that the pause didn’t make a real difference, because immigration sweeps continued to ripple through farmworker communities Friday. UFW President Teresa Romero said that as long as immigration enforcement continues where farmworkers live, “some farmworkers will be detained and deported.”
On Monday, a coalition of dozens of industry groups celebrated last week’s pause in a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Kristi L. Noem and Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer.
“We … appreciate Trump’s pledge that ‘changes are coming’ and commitment to issuing policies soon to help stabilize and meet critical workforce needs,” the letter stated. It was signed by construction, retail and health-care industry leaders, including the National Retail Federation and Associated Builders and Contractors, the two groups confirmed to The Post.
The White House’s policy reversal appeared to reflect opposing factions within the administration that have pulled the president in two directions on the issue. White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, an architect of Trump’s aggressive immigration policy, privately opposed carving out exceptions for certain industries that rely heavily on workers without legal status, The Post reported Monday.
Conversely, Brooke Rollins, the agriculture secretary, stressed to Trump the concerns that farming industry leaders have raised about threats to their workforce. More than 40 percent of agriculture laborers are undocumented, according to 2022 estimates by the Agriculture Department.

The crops are all in and the peaches are rott’ning,
The oranges piled in their creosote dumps;
They’re flying ’em back to the Mexican border
To pay all their money to wade back again
wrote Woody Guthrie in 1948 or ’49. Plus ça change, . . .
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I can only imagine what a head of lettuce is going to cost soon. But, hey, this will not matter AT ALL to the oligarchs serviced by the Trump maladministration and its execrable party of toadies.
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‘These are the most magnificent poles made’: As Middle East rages, Trump brags about new flag poles at the White House
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The bipolar bully shifts policies like he changes wives. He waffles depending on which way the political winds are blowing.
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Putin’s Agent Orange is doing his job to destroy the United States as the most powerful country in the world economically and militarily.
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Sounds like he’s turning into one of those rulers whose bases his edicts on what the last person in the room has said to him.
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Stephen Miller, Hater-in-Chief, gets the last word.
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Apparently he rejects the view that immigration strengthens the USA.
Odd that consider the USA was built of immigration.
But no doubt a person of his outlook would claim that was only because the right sort of people from Europe immigrated when they did.
Depressingly predictable.
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Their businesses, livelihoods, & the country’s economy are being dismantled before their very eyes, & they’re “disappointed” & “concerned”?! Why are T’s actions again being minimized & normalized?!
I hate to say, “I told you s…” aah, who am I kidding? I love to say, “I told you so”!
Toldja! Toldjatoldjatoldja! Toldja!
(I realize this isn’t the sort of response likely to bring anyone to consider my point of view, but sometimes I just gotta let loose.)
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Last week when tRump mused about carving exceptions in the policy, my first reaction was big farms and hotel magnates had called his cell phone – the one he always answers. My second thought was what Stephen Miller would have to say about it.
I guess we know who is running the show. Miller was probably angered and emboldened to share his vision of the ultimate goal, get rid of all the brown people this year. P25 has never been about legal immigrants. It is about NO immigrants. No exceptions. Make America White Again.
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Exactly. These people are utter racists.
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“It is about NO immigrants. No exceptions.”
Yes, there are exceptions. . . white European/European descent people have not been targeted at all in these ‘raids’.
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Except the blonde haired, blue eyed Ukrainians are having their temporary status revoked. Shameful.
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Cain’t be having no anti-Putin folks coming into this country, eh!
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Between the ages of 18 and 28, I worked seven apple harvests in Vermont: five in the trees as a picker, one as a crew boss, and one as a driver. So, I know a little bit about this world.
I can’t see how the people I know in Vermont will get their crops in without immigrant labor. There just aren’t enough United States citizens to do that kind of strenuous, relatively low-wage work,
Hell, even if I wanted to go back to orchards, I couldn’t; I’m old now with bad knees. The thought of punching the clutch on a big tractor–or carrying around and climbing an 18-foot wooden ladder–arouses dread in my heart (and left knee).
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Republicans are split on Iran. Some want U.S. involvement, and some want distance from foreign wars. Both strong opinions. Both reasonably informed. Both sides stance is based on intelligence, policy and/or principle.
Trump hasn’t got a clue. He has no policy nor wants or cares about U.S. policy. He ignores intelligence briefings. He has not principles. He supports Israel until he doesn’t. He thinks he’s a negotiator, but that button sure is tempting to show power!
His litmus test: Which option will make me look? Who do I blame if my decision is wrong?
WH and Pentagon make it up as they go along. They ignore advice from career experienced military strategists and leaders. They cancel “Gang of 8” and intelligence sessions.
And congressional republicans refuse to speak, hold accountability, or uphold Constitution.
Enter a war? POTUS TACO. GOP MIA.
Protecting interests (and employment) of the people who elected him? FLIP FLOP.
Deportation? POTUS TACO. GOP MIA.
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So basically this blog is in favor of wage suppression by illegal workers and lines up with big employers to encourage that. So all your big rah-rah diversity stuff is just a figleaf and the real reason you support unlimited illegal immigration is to cut wages.
Openly worrying about what things will cost when illegal slave labor is removed shows where your real priorities lie- supressing wages.
The sneering attitude of democratic party elites toward workers hurt by illegal immigration was the core reason Trump won.
Well, at least that Hamptons home will be kept nice and clean by illegals!
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