Trump’s immigration policy just did a full 180. After quietly stepping back from workplace raids last week, the administration is once again greenlighting aggressive ICE enforcement at farms, hotels, and restaurants—industries where undocumented labor is a big part of the workforce.
Homeland Security officials made it clear on a Monday conference call with agency heads: the pause is over. Immigration agents are back on assignment, targeting job sites where undocumented workers are common, according to reports from the Washington Post and CNN.
So what changed? It all started with a behind-the-scenes push from Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins, who told Trump the raids were putting major strain on industries already dealing with worker shortages. Trump seemed to agree—at least briefly—saying some of these folks were “very good, long time workers.”
But the calm didn’t last.
Just days later, Trump’s inner circle of immigration hardliners, including Stephen Miller and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, stepped in and pushed for a return to aggressive action. Now ICE is being told to step it up, with a daily goal of 3,000 arrests as part of what the administration is calling its “Mass Deportation Program.”
Farm owners, hotel managers, and restaurant operators are worried, and labor advocates are calling the quick flip a political move that sacrifices vulnerable workers for campaign points.
Bottom line: The pause was real short-lived, and now ICE is back on the move. Workers in these industries? Stay alert.
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