Trump says there will be ‘temporary pass’ for migrant farm, hotel workers
- President Donald Trump said on June 30, 2025, his administration is developing a temporary pass for migrant workers in agriculture and hospitality sectors.
- This plan follows earlier immigration enforcement actions at workplaces, prompting protests and political battles, while the administration continues mass deportations.
- Trump emphasized the difficulty of farm work, noting longtime workers who may have entered incorrectly are being taken away, which harms farmers.
- He explained in a Fox News interview that the administration plans to create a temporary permit system allowing workers to pay taxes and giving farmers some degree of authority, rather than removing all workers abruptly.
- The administration's shift suggests a degree of flexibility amid tough immigration policies, aiming to protect critical workforces while enforcing the law.
71 Articles
71 Articles
'Stunning': Fox host mocked for spinning Trump's flip-flop on 'signature policy issue'
Fox News host Maria Bartiromo is facing criticism for calling President Donald Trump’s latest reversal on undocumented immigrant workers “big news,” after the President floated creating “temporary passes.”Earlier this month, Trump announced ICE would back off from detaining and deporting undocumented immigrants working on farms and in hotels, only to announce just days later an apparent reversal to that policy, by declaring he would enact “the s…
Trump urges 'temporary pass' from immigration crackdown for key industries: 'I cherish our farmers'
President Donald Trump outlined plans for a "temporary pass" allowing farmers and hotels to retain illegal immigrant workers while focusing ICE enforcement on criminals.
One Woodburn man opts to go home to Mexico on his own terms
As the Trump administration continues to close the doors on immigrants to the country, some are considering leaving. But one man who built a life in Oregon said leaving Trump's America is not a black and white choice.
Trump’s relief for farmers looks like control by fear
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Over the past several weeks, President Trump’s immigration policy has see-sawed between all-out enforcement crackdowns and deportation exemption carve-outs for favored industries. Neither approach is the answer to the immigration mess. Our lawmakers should establish a path for the undocumented, temporary legal status individuals, and other immigrant groups to earn a permanent legal status. On June 12, the administration, afte…
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