Trump’s Treatment of Immigrant Workers Will Make Food Prices Even Higher
But many of these foreign-born workers — regardless of legal status — are afraid that they’ll be swept up in the administration’s illegal and cruel arrest, detention, and deportation actions.
So, they’ve started staying home.
The long-term effects of losing a substantial portion of the workforce will send a shock through the industry: crops will not be harvested, livestock will not be processed, grocery shelves will thin out, restaurants and food trucks will close, and food will get more expensive than it already is.

But the personal cost to the people who migrated here to make better lives for their families will be devastating.
Late last year, a Pew Research poll showed that a large majority of voters believe that immigrants fill jobs that U.S. citizens don’t want. Many of these jobs are dangerous and poorly paid.

A Gallup poll was conducted in June that shows that an all-time high of 79% of U.S. adults view immigration as a good thing for the country. Only 17% said immigration is a bad thing.

This same poll revealed that a large majority of Americans disapprove of the way that Trump is handling immigration.

The Senate Joint Economic Committee published a paper in 2020, “Immigrants are Vital to the U.S. Economy.” The report stated that immigrants disproportionately worked in the jobs labeled essential during the covid lockdown.
The report concludes:
Since the founding of the nation, immigrants have played a vital role in creating a diverse, dynamic, and growing U.S. economy. Immigrants help fuel economic activity through their attachment to the labor market, their spending power, and their entrepreneurial spirit behind much of our innovations. To foster a stronger and more equitable American economy, new policies must build upon the essential contributions — and address the challenges of — the foreign-born workforce and immigrant-owned businesses.
The Trump administration has not read this paper, written during Trump’s first term, when Republican Don Bacon was chair of the committee.
The administration persists in labeling immigrants as criminals and unlawfully conducting violent raids carried out by anonymous, jackbooted thugs.
The GOP majorities in Congress are doing nothing to stop this assault by the government.
The American people do not agree with the administration’s policies or the brutal and vicious treatment of immigrants who live in this country.
There is only one solution: Take back the Congress in 2026. If our elected officials will not carry out the will of the people, they should not be in office.
Perhaps Maryland will join the Democratic states and gerrymander our congressional districts to force out Rep. Andrew P. Harris (R-MD01).
We should be so lucky.
Jan Plotczyk spent 25 years as a survey and education statistician with the federal government, at the Census Bureau and the National Center for Education Statistics. She retired to Rock Hall.
Common Sense for the Eastern Shore







