US Agriculture Secretary: No Amnesty for Deported Farmworkers; Medicaid Recipients Can Replace Them
UNITED STATES, JUL 8 – Agriculture Secretary Rollins vows no amnesty for undocumented farmworkers and plans to replace them with Medicaid recipients and automation to achieve a 100% American agricultural workforce.
- Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins announced there will be "no amnesty" for illegal agricultural workers during a press conference on July 8, 2025, as part of President Donald Trump's immigration policy.
- The USDA aims for a 100% American workforce and suggests using Medicaid recipients to fill labor shortages after deportations.
- China's foreign ministry criticized the U.S. measures as "discriminatory" and urged the U.S. to stop politicizing trade and investment issues.
111 Articles
111 Articles
Ag Policy Blog: Rollins Says No Amnesty for Farmworkers, But Medicaid Recipients Could Fill the Void
At a news conference on Tuesday, Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said there will be no legal amnesty for undocumented farmworkers. Instead, Rollins suggested unemployed people on Medicaid could fill those jobs that can't be done by automation.


Iowa leaders weigh in on intersection of deportation policy and need for farm labor
Iowa’s elected leaders present and past are discussing a back-and-forth within President Donald Trump’s administration about how to manage farm labor amid a hardline deportation policy.


Medicaid enrollees targeted for forced farm work under Trump immigration crackdown
A top Trump administration official is proposing what critics call a thinly veiled form of forced labor, suggesting that millions of low-income Americans on Medicaid should be used to replace undocumented immigrants the government is deporting en masse from U.S.…
The president was golfing while Texas flood victims were fighting to survive
The most bizarre of all is the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture, who says immigrant farm workers should be deported and replaced with people on Medicaid. Many in the Trump administration claim to be Christians, yet do not seem to care about the lives of people who are only trying to survive, writes Desmal Baker of Painesville in a letter to the editor.
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