1.2 million immigrants are gone from the US labor force under Trump,
preliminary data shows
[September 02, 2025] By
COREY WILLIAMS
It's tomato season and Lidia is harvesting on farms in California's
Central Valley.
She is also anxious. Attention from U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement could upend her life more than 23 years after she illegally
crossed the U.S.-Mexico border as a teenager.
“The worry is they’ll pull you over when you’re driving and ask for your
papers,” said Lidia, who spoke to The Associated Press on condition that
only her first name be used because of her fears of deportation. “We
need to work. We need to feed our families and pay our rent.”
As parades and other events celebrating the contributions of workers in
the U.S. are held Monday for the Labor Day holiday, experts say
President Donald Trump’s stepped-up immigration policies are impacting
the nation's labor force.
More than 1.2 million immigrants disappeared from the labor force from
January through the end of July, according to preliminary Census Bureau
data analyzed by the Pew Research Center. That includes people who are
in the country illegally as well as legal residents.
Immigrants make up almost 20% of the U.S. workforce and that data shows
45% of workers in farming, fishing and forestry are immigrants,
according to Pew senior researcher Stephanie Kramer. About 30% of all
construction workers are immigrants and 24% of service workers are
immigrants, she added.

The loss in immigrant workers comes as the nation is seeing the first
decline in the overall immigrant population after the number of people
in the U.S. illegally reached an all-time high of 14 million in 2023.
“It’s unclear how much of the decline we’ve seen since January is due to
voluntary departures to pursue other opportunities or avoid deportation,
removals, underreporting or other technical issues,” Kramer said.
“However, we don’t believe that the preliminary numbers indicating
net-negative migration are so far off that the decline isn’t real.”
Trump campaigned on a promise to deport millions of immigrants working
in the U.S. illegally. He has said he is focusing deportation efforts on
“dangerous criminals,” but most people detained by ICE have no criminal
convictions. At the same time, the number of illegal border crossings
has plunged under his policies.
Pia Orrenius, a labor economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas,
said immigrants normally contribute at least 50% of job growth in the
U.S.
“The influx across the border from what we can tell is essentially
stopped, and that’s where we were getting millions and millions of
migrants over the last four years,” she said. “That has had a huge
impact on the ability to create jobs.”
'Crops did go to waste’
Just across the border from Mexico in McAllen, Texas, corn and cotton
fields are about ready for harvesting. Elizabeth Rodriguez worries there
won’t be enough workers available for the gins and other machinery once
the fields are cleared.
Immigration enforcement actions at farms, businesses and construction
sites brought everything to a standstill, said Rodriguez, director of
farmworker advocacy for the National Farmworker Ministry.
“In May, during the peak of our watermelon and cantaloupe season, it
delayed it. A lot of crops did go to waste,” she said.
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Migrant farmworkers head to pick crops on an early morning in
Fresno, Calif., on July 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File)
 In Ventura County, California,
northwest of Los Angeles, Lisa Tate manages her family business that
grows citrus fruits, avocados and coffee on eight ranches and 800
acres (323 hectares).
Most of the men and women who work their farms are
contractor-provided day laborers. There were days earlier this year
when crews would be smaller. Tate is hesitant to place that blame on
immigration policies. But the fear of ICE raids spread quickly.
Dozens of area farmworkers were arrested late this spring.
“People were being taken out of laundromats, off the side of the
road,” Tate said.
Lidia, the farmworker who spoke to the AP through an interpreter,
said her biggest fear is being sent back to Mexico. Now 36, she is
married with three school-age children who were born here.
“I don’t know if I’ll be able to bring my kids," said Lidia. "I’m
also very concerned I’d have to start from zero. My whole life has
been in the United States.”
From construction to health care
Construction sites in and around McAllen also “are completely dead,”
Rodriguez said.
“We have a large labor force that is undocumented,” she said. “We’ve
seen ICE particularly targeting construction sites and attempting to
target mechanic and repair shops."
The number of construction jobs are down in about half of U.S.
metropolitan areas, according to an Associated General Contractors
of America analysis of government employment data. The largest loss
of 7,200 jobs was in the Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario,
California, area. The Los Angeles-Long Beach-Glendale area lost
6,200 jobs.
“Construction employment has stalled or retreated in many areas for
a variety of reasons,” said Ken Simonson, the association’s chief
economist. “But contractors report they would hire more people if
only they could find more qualified and willing workers and tougher
immigration enforcement wasn’t disrupting labor supplies.”

Kramer, with Pew, also warns about the potential impact on health
care. She says immigrants make up about 43% of home health care
aides.
The Service Employees International Union represents about 2 million
workers in health care, the public sector and property services. An
estimated half of long-term care workers who are members of SEIU
2015 in California are immigrants, said Arnulfo De La Cruz, the
local's president.
“What’s going to happen when millions of Americans can no longer
find a home care provider?" De La Cruz said. “What happens when
immigrants aren’t in the field to pick our crops? Who’s going to
staff our hospitals and nursing homes?”
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