Trump, immigration
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New research shows that after recent deportation sweeps, parents kept their children home — with big impacts on how all students learn.
Jacob Soboroff, NBC News Correspondent joins Nicolle Wallace on Deadline White House from Ventura County, California the site of a immigration raid conducted by ICE on Tuesday to show the impact that the continued immigration raids and mass arrests carried out by ICE is set to have on the California and American economy,
A study from the University Colorado Denver estimated that for every 1 million workers deported, 88,000 U.S. native workers lost employment. With fewer workers, businesses have a harder time investing in expansion, and there are fewer consumers in the economy.
Federal authorities raided a swap meet in Santa Fe Springs Saturday as tens of thousands of 'No Kings' protesters flooded the streets of downtown Los Angeles in opposition to President Trump’s policies.
Trump promised in a Sunday night Truth Social post to “expand efforts” to detain undocumented people in major cities rather than rural areas: “You don’t hear about Sanctuary Cities in our Heartland!”
A spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security declined to confirm the raids to NPR ... the reported immigration enforcement actions on farms and how these may impact kitchen tables ...
Federal agents have rounded up dozens of California farmworkers in large-scale raids at packinghouses and fields that farm bureaus say threaten businesses that supply much of the country’s food.
As federal agents step up immigration raids In Los Angeles... It’s not only sparking concern in immigrant communities, but in the business world as well. Immigrant labor is one of the backbones of Southern California’s economy with jobs ranging from agriculture to construction to hospitality.
"For more than 40 years, we have not had significant immigration reform that creates opportunities, outside of temporary ones," said Sarah Keeney, the lead organizer of Omaha Together One Community. "We need more workers,
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LAist on MSNAmericans will feel effects of immigration enforcement on farms, union president warnsWorkers are "terrified" as immigration agents sweep farms, the president of United Farm Workers says, adding that Americans should think about the "human loss" as well as "crops rotting" in the fields.
U.S. President Donald Trump's administration has directed immigration officials to largely pause raids on farms, hotels, restaurants and meatpacking plants, according to an internal email reviewed by Reuters,