Trump immigration raids threaten US food security, farmers warn

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Tractors are seen at a strawberry field in Oxnard, California, on July 14, 2025. (AFP)
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Lisa Tate Soury, owner of Rancho Filoso Farm, poses near avocado trees on her farm in Santa Paula, California, on July 14, 2025. Lisa Tate, whose family has been farming in Ventura County since 1876, cannot recall a threat to crops like the one emanating from Donald Trump's anti-immigrant onslaught. (AFP)
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A farmworker walks in the middle of a strawberry field in Oxnard, California, on July 14, 2025. AFP
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Updated 27 July 2025
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Trump immigration raids threaten US food security, farmers warn

  • The number of government certified positions for temporary agricultural workers practically tripled between 2014 and 2024, underlining just how much American agriculture depends on foreign workers

VENTURA, California: Lisa Tate, whose family has been farming in Ventura County since 1876, cannot recall a threat to crops like the one emanating from Donald Trump’s anti-immigrant onslaught.

Tate fears that the crackdown on illegal workers, far from addressing the problems of this vital agricultural region north of Los Angeles, could “dismantle the whole economy” and put the country’s food security at risk.

“I began to get really concerned when we saw a group of border control agents come up to the Central Valley and just start going onto farms and just kind of trying to chase people down, evading the property owner,” the 46-year-old farmer, who grows avocados, citrus and coffee, said in an interview.

“That’s not something we’re used to happening in agriculture,” she added.

The impact goes beyond harvesters, she said. “There’s a whole food chain involved,” from field workers to truck drivers to people working in packing houses and in sales.

“It’s just, everybody’s scared,” she said — even a multi-generational American like her.

“I’m nervous and I’m scared, because we’re feeling like we’re being attacked.”

Other farmers contacted by AFP declined to speak to the media, saying they feared potential reprisals from the Trump administration.

Perennial labor shortage

The agricultural sector has for years been trying to find permanent solutions for its perennial labor shortages, beyond issuing temporary permits for migrant workers.

“Some of the work we have is seasonal. But really, around here, we need workers that are year-round,” Tate says.

The number of government certified positions for temporary agricultural workers practically tripled between 2014 and 2024, Department of Labor statistics show, underlining just how much American agriculture depends on foreign workers.

On top of that, some 42 percent of farm workers are not authorized to work in the United States, according to a 2022 study by the Department of Agriculture.

Those numbers line up with the struggles many farmers go through to find labor.

They say US citizens are not interested in the physically demanding work, with its long days under extreme temperatures, rain and sun.

Against that backdrop, Tate warns that removing people who are actually doing the work will cause immeasurable damage.

Not only will it harm farms and ranches, which could take years to recover, it will also send food prices soaring, and even endanger US food security, possibly requiring the country to start importing provisions that may previously have been grown at home, she says.

“What we really need is some legislation that has the type of program that we need, and that works for both the workers, that ensures their safety, it ensures a fair playing field when it comes to international trade, as well as as domestic needs,” Tate said.

‘Between a rock and a hard place'

Some farmworkers agreed to speak to AFP on condition of not being fully identified, for fear of being arrested.

“All we do is work,” a worker named Silvia said. She saw several friends arrested in a raid in in Oxnard, about 10 miles (16 kilometers) west of Ventura.

The 32-year-old Mexican lives in constant fear that she will be the next one picked up and, in the end, separated from her two US-born daughters.

“We’re between a rock and a hard place. If we don’t work, how will we pay our bills? And if we go out, we run the risk of running into them,” she said, referring to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents.

“The way the goverment is working right now, everybody loses,” said Miguel, who has been working in the fields of southern California for three decades.

The 54-year-old said that workers are losing jobs, farm owners are losing their labor, and as a result, the United States is losing its food.

Miguel has worked in various different agriculture sector jobs, including during the Covid-19 pandemic. All of them were “very hard jobs,” he said.

Now he feels like he has a target on his back.

“They should do a little research so they understand. The food they eat comes from the fields, right?” he said.

“So it would be good if they were more aware, and gave us an opportunity to contribute positively, and not send us into hiding.”


Zelensky holds ‘very substantive’ call with US envoys Witkoff and Kushner

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Zelensky holds ‘very substantive’ call with US envoys Witkoff and Kushner

KYIV: President Volodymyr Zelensky said Saturday he and his negotiators who are discussing a US-led plan for Ukraine had a “very substantive and constructive” call with US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner.
“Ukraine is committed to continuing to work honestly with the American side to bring about real peace,” Zelensky said on Telegram as the third day of the talks were to be held in Florida.
“We agreed on the next steps and the format of the talks with America,” he added.
Zelensky, who was in Kyiv, joined the call with top Ukrainian negotiator Rustem Umerov and Andriy Gnatov, the chief of staff of Kyiv’s armed forces, both of whom were in Miami for the talks with the US side.
The two Americans — Witkoff, who is US President Donald Trump’s special envoy, and Kushner, who is Trump’s son-in-law — had been meeting with Umerov and Gnatov since Thursday.
Trump’s team is trying to swiftly settle the conflict in Ukraine, which has run for nearly four years.
An initial US plan released two weeks ago was seen by Kyiv and its European allies as aligning too closely with many of Russia’s hard-line positions, and has since been revised.
Zelensky said the call with Witkoff and Kushner “focused on many aspects and quickly discussed key issues that could guarantee an end to the bloodshed and remove the threat of a third Russian invasion, as well as the threat of Russia failing to fulfil its promises, as has happened many times in the past.”
He said he was waiting a “detailed report” from Umerov and Gnatov.
“We cannot discuss everything over the phone, so we need to work in detail with the teams on ideas and proposals,” he added.
Zelensky said Ukraine’s approach to the negotiations was that “everything must be capable of working, every important thing for peace, security and reconstruction.”
French President Emmanuel Macon said on Saturday that he, Zelensky, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz would meet in London on Monday to “take stock” of the US-led negotiations.