The Trump administration’s deportation raids earned a surprising new critic this month: the Trump administration. In a filing to the Federal Register submitted Oct. 2, the Department of Labor disclosed that the White House’s anti-migrant policies now threaten the “stability of domestic food production and prices for U.S consumers.” What’s more, the threat to America’s ability to grow and pick food domestically will only “grow” as Trump-led efforts to “enhance enforcement of the nation’s immigration laws are deployed.”

A ‘structural, not cyclical, workforce crisis’

Contrary to Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins’ claim that the sector is moving “towards automation and 100% American participation,” the Labor Department’s filing suggests that American workers are “simply not interested in and do not have the skills to perform agricultural jobs” typically done by a now-shrinking pool of migrant farm laborers, said The American Prospect. There is no policy issue that “looms larger in agriculture” than the “acute, worsening shortage of workers on American farms,” the National Milk Producers Federation said in a press release. “Well-publicized” instances of “aggressive immigration enforcement, including on dairies, can’t help but raise concerns,” the group said.

succeed with “even a fraction” of its multi-million person deportation agenda, it would not only result in “major disruptions across the food system,” but could “upend” the rural economies that “depend on migrant workers and their families,” said The Guardian.

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“Essential isn’t a strong enough word” to describe foreign-born laborers, said Kansas Livestock Association head Matt Teagarden to Politico. There is “some version of an immigrant,” even if “second or third generation, that are just critical to that work.”

American Immigration Council in an August press release.

Rising costs are at the center of the Labor Department’s recent filing, which focuses on bringing H-2A foreign workers legally into the country at reduced wages. H-2A workers are paid based on the Labor Department’s Adverse Effect Wage Rate, which “ignores differences between local­ities, detailed job types, skills, and experience,” often resulting in higher pay than many state minimums, said Harvard Business Review. It’s unclear whether the Department genuinely believes the president’s immigration policies are a real threat to the agricultural workforce, or is merely “pretending this threat is real” to drive down wages, said the Prospect. “Neither looks particularly good.”

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