Trump's immigration crackdown weighs heavy on the US labor market
[October 20, 2025] By
PAUL WISEMAN and GISELA SALOMON
Maria worked cleaning schools in Florida for $13 an hour. Every two
weeks, she’d get a $900 paycheck from her employer, a contractor. Not
much — but enough to cover rent in the house that she and her
11-year-old son share with five families, plus electricity, a cellphone
and groceries.
In August, it all ended.
When she showed up at the job one morning, her boss told her that she
couldn’t work there anymore. The Trump administration had terminated
President Joe Biden’s humanitarian parole program, which provided legal
work permits for Cubans, Haitians, Venezuelans as well as Nicaraguans
like Maria.
“I feel desperate,’’ said Maria, 48, who requested anonymity to talk
about her ordeal because she fears being detained and deported. “I don’t
have any money to buy anything. I have $5 in my account. I’m left with
nothing.’’
President Donald Trump’s sweeping crackdown on immigration is throwing
foreigners like Maria out of work and shaking the American economy and
job market. And it's happening at a time when hiring is already
deteriorating amid uncertainty over Trump's erratic trade policies.
Immigrants do jobs — cleaning houses, picking tomatoes, painting fences
— that most native-born Americans won’t, and for less money. But they
also bring the technical skills and entrepreneurial energy that have
helped make the United States the world’s economic superpower.
Trump is attacking immigration at both ends of spectrum, deporting
low-wage laborers and discouraging skilled foreigners from bringing
their talents to the United States.
And he is targeting an influx of foreign workers that eased labor
shortages and upward pressure on wages and prices at a time when most
economists thought that taming inflation would require sky-high interest
rates and a recession — a fate the United States escaped in 2023 and
2024.

“Immigrants are good for the economy,'' said Lee Branstetter, an
economist at Carnegie-Mellon University. "Because we had a lot of
immigration over the past five years, an inflationary surge was not as
bad as many people expected.''
More workers filling more jobs and spending more money has also helped
drive economic growth and create still-more job openings. Economists
fear that Trump's deportations and limits on even legal immigration will
do the reverse.
In a July report, researchers Wendy Edelberg and Tara Watson of the
centrist Brookings Institution and Stan Veuger of the right-leaning
American Enterprise Institute calculated that the loss of foreign
workers will mean that monthly U.S. job growth “could be near zero or
negative in the next few years.’’
Hiring has already slowed significantly, averaging a meager 29,000 a
month from June through August. (The September jobs report has been
delayed by the ongoing shutdown of the federal government.) During the
post-pandemic hiring boom of 2021-2023, by contrast, employers added a
stunning 400,000 jobs a month.
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, citing fallout Trump's
immigration and trade policies, downgraded its forecast for U.S.
economic growth this year to 1.4% from the 1.9% it had previously
expected and from 2.5% in 2024.
‘We need these people’
Goodwin Living, an Alexandria, Virginia nonprofit that provides senior
housing, health care and hospice services, had to lay off four employees
from Haiti after the Trump administration terminated their work permits.
The Haitians had been allowed to work under a humanitarian parole
program and had earned promotions at Goodwin.
“That was a very, very difficult day for us,” CEO Rob Liebreich said.
“It was really unfortunate to have to say goodbye to them, and we’re
still struggling to fill those roles.’’
Liebreich is worried that another 60 immigrant workers could lose their
temporary legal right to live and work in the United States. “We need
all those hands,’’ he said. “We need all these people.”
Goodwin Living has 1,500 employees, 60% of them from foreign countries.
It has struggled to find enough nurses, therapists and maintenance
staff. Trump’s immigration crackdown, Liebreich said, is “making it
harder.’’
The ICE crackdown
Trump’s immigration ambitions, intended to turn back what he calls an
"invasion'' at America's southern border and secure jobs for U.S.-born
workers, were once viewed with skepticism because of the money and
economic disruption required to reach his goal of deporting 1 million
people a year. But legislation that Trump signed into law July 4 — and
which Republicans call the One Big Beautiful Bill Act — suddenly made
his plans plausible.

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Maintenance workers Enaytullah Hafizi, left, originally from
Afghanistan, Eric Frimpong, center, originally from Ghana, and
Melvin Palmer, right, originally from Sierra Leone, fix an overhead
light at Goodwin House Alexandria, Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025, in
Alexandria, Va. (AP Photo/Eric Lee)
 The law pours $150 billion into
immigration enforcement, setting aside $46.5 billion to hire 10,000
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents and $45 billion to
increase the capacity of immigrant detention centers.
And his empowered ICE agents have shown a willingness to move fast
and break things — even when their aggression conflicts with other
administration goals.
Last month, immigration authorities raided a Hyundai battery plant
in Georgia, detained 300 South Korean workers and showed video of
some of them shackled in chains. They’d been working to get the
plant up and running, bringing expertise in battery technology and
Hyundai procedures that local American workers didn’t have.
The incident enraged the South Koreans and ran counter to Trump’s
push to lure foreign manufacturers to invest in America. South
Korean President Lee Jae Myung warned that the country’s other
companies might be reluctant about betting on America if their
workers couldn’t get visas promptly and risked getting detained.
Sending Medicaid recipients to the fields
America’s farmers are among the president’s most dependable
supporters.
But John Boyd Jr., who farms 1,300 acres of soybeans, wheat and corn
in southern Virginia, said that the immigration raids — and the
threat of them — are hurting farmers already contending with low
crop prices, high costs and fallout from Trump’s trade war with
China, which has stopped buying U.S. soybeans and sorghum.
“You got ICE out here, herding these people up,’’ said Boyd, founder
of the National Black Farmers Association . “(Trump) says they’re
murderers and thieves and drug dealers, all this stuff. But these
are people who are in this country doing hard work that many
Americans don’t want to do.’’
Boyd scoffed at U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins’
suggestion in July that U.S.-born Medicaid recipients could head to
the fields to meet work requirements imposed this summer by the
Republican Congress. “People in the city aren’t coming back to the
farm to do this kind of work,’’ he said. “It takes a certain type of
person to bend over in 100-degree heat.’’
The Trump administration itself admits that the immigration
crackdown is causing labor shortages on the farm that could
translate into higher prices at the supermarket.

“The near total cessation of the inflow of illegal aliens combined
with the lack of an available legal workforce,’’ the Labor
Department said in an Oct. 2 filing the Federal Register, “results
in significant disruptions to production costs and (threatens) the
stability of domestic food production and prices for U.S
consumers.’’
"You're not welcome here''
Jed Kolko of the Peterson Institute for International Economics said
that job growth is slowing in businesses that rely on immigrants.
Construction companies, for instance, have shed 10,000 jobs since
May.
“Those are the short-term effects,’’ said Kolko, a Commerce
Department official in the Biden administration. “The longer-term
effects are more serious because immigrants traditionally have
contributed more than their share of patents, innovation,
productivity.’’
Especially worrisome to many economists was Trump’s sudden
announcement last month that he was raising the fee on H-1B visas,
meant to lure hard-to-find skilled foreign workers to the United
States, from as little as $215 to $100,000.
“A $100,000 visa fee is not just a bureaucratic cost — it’s a
signal," Dany Bahar, senior fellow at the Center for Global
Development, said. "It tells global talent: ‘You are not welcome
here.’’’
Some are already packing up.
In Washington D.C., one H-1B visa holder, a Harvard graduate from
India who works for a nonprofit helping Africa's poor, said Trump's
signal to employers is clear: Think twice about hiring H-1B visa
holders.
The man, who requested anonymity, is already preparing paperwork to
move to the United Kingdom. “The damage is already done,
unfortunately,’’ he said.
_____
Wiseman reported from Washington and Salomon from Miami.
AP Writers Fu Ting and Christopher Rugaber in Washington contributed
to this report.
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