Business groups quietly push back on Trump's immigration raids
https://www.axios.com/2025/03/02/business-groups-immigration-raids?
Business groups are
quietly urging the Trump administration to ease up on its plans for immigration raids in
workplaces, but the White House is resisting.
Why it matters: So far, the pace of workplace raids doesn't
appear to have increased under President Trump compared to the Biden
administration's efforts. But aggressive shows of
enforcement are
key to Trump's plans to crackdown on illegal immigration.
Zoom in: Just the threat of more raids has rattled
several industries — such as construction
and agriculture —
that rely on immigrant labor, not all of it legal.
- "Rumors of raids are having more impact at
this point than raids themselves," said Brian Turmail, vice president
of public affairs and workforce for the Associated General Contractors of
America (AGC).
- Two agriculture industry group leaders echoed
that sentiment. Concerns about raids have led some workers to walk off job
sites early or not show up at all, they said.
- "It's a question of, where are we being
prioritized" in the immigration crackdown, said one of the
agriculture industry group leaders, who asked not to be
identified because of the sensitivity of the immigration issue. "I
think there's a lot of uncertainty" about that.
The big picture: Trump's team and other Republican leaders are
betting that a crackdown on immigrants not authorized to work in the U.S. will
open up jobs for Americans and legal residents, and raise wages among
working-class voters, who've drifted toward the GOP in recent elections.
- In doing so, the administration is bucking some
of the GOP's traditional supporters in the business community.
- Americans "overwhelmingly voted for decisive
action on the border and those here illegally," said Chris LaCivita,
a Trump campaign co-manager who's now a senior adviser at Building
America's Future, a group that supports Trump initiatives. "No amount
of lobbying from certain business sectors will change what the new GOP and
President Trump are determined to implement."
- "Republicans are making a big switch, a lot
of them," a former Trump administration official said. They're
"recognizing that the American worker is not happy, and they're
justified in not being happy."
Critics see the
White House's plan as
leading to an exodus of workers in jobs that many Americans don't want to do,
resulting in lower productivity, higher prices and a damaged economy.
- "The long-term impact will be where housing
prices are already too high in places like Arizona," said Sen. Mark
Kelly (D-Ariz.). "When they can't get the workforce to build the
houses, the prices are going to go up and rents are going to go up."
- "We've been told why Americans don't
do" certain jobs, said immigration attorney Patricia Gannon, who used
to work for the Immigration and Naturalization Service. "We
may not like the answers."
By the
numbers: Undocumented
workers and those with expired work visas can be difficult to track across
sectors of the economy, but some studies have given a glimpse of their
presence.
- The American
Immigration Council estimates that about 4.6% of the employed labor
force are undocumented immigrants.
- A recent Department
of Agriculture study
estimated that about 42% of America's farmworkers were undocumented from
2020 to 2022.
- About a quarter of construction workers across
the U.S. may be undocumented, according to the National
Immigration Forum,
an immigration advocacy group.
Sen. Bernie Moreno
(R-Ohio) told Axios he's
heard from companies in his state concerned about worksite raids.
- " 'Don't hire illegals' should be your
statement," Moreno said he told one business association when it
asked him what it should say about the situation.
- "Migrants are … fleeing terrible
situations," Moreno said. "But it's the companies that are
hiring that need to have some sort of ramifications."
The
intrigue: Trump's
immigration plans have sparked increased lobbying on the issue. The U.S.
Chamber of Commerce, the nation's largest lobbying organization, recently filed
a government disclosure that offered hints at its work on immigration.
- The chamber didn't respond to an interview
request and didn't list specific policies it's lobbying on in its February
report.
- But a more detailed filing for the last quarter
of 2024 showed the chamber lobbied on "high-skilled" immigrants,
"less-skilled" immigrants, various immigration visa categories
and several immigration-related bills.
- Other industry groups, including the AGC, are
pushing for protections for their labor force, including more visas for
foreign workers and more trade school trainings to hire Americans.
What they're
saying: "[Pennsylvania
Democratic Sen.] John Fetterman would have a better chance of convincing Trump
to do something for the business community than the chamber," said one
Republican lobbyist, who currently doesn't have a client focused on immigration.
- "The chamber represents the Nikki
Haley-establishment, Paul Ryan-, Mitch McConnell-wing of the party, which
is dead and buried at this point," the lobbyist added.
- "Businesses that human traffic and exploit
migrants for cheap labor should be afraid: We will go after them,"
said Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary for public affairs at the
Department of Homeland Security.
- "As for law-abiding companies, the media is
intentionally manufacturing fear," she added. "If there was any
correlation between rampant illegal immigration and a good economy, Biden
would have had a booming economy."
Many
Democrats have backed
detaining and removing criminals who are in the U.S. without authorization, but
don't support Trump's plans.
- "Mass deportations," Kelly said,
"are designed to scare people. We need to deport criminals."
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