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Raids prove there's a need for reform
Los Angeles Times
|September 21, 2025
Even California GOP lawmakers say ease up on crackdown and fix immigration policy.
PROTESTERS confront federal agents forming a line during an immigration raid at the Glass House Farms facility in Camarillo in July.
When I wrote last week about how immigration raids are targeting far more laborers than criminals, and whacking the California economy at a cost to all of us, I was surprised by the number of readers who wrote to say it's high time for immigration reform.
The cynic in me had an immediate response, which essentially was, yeah, sure.
Bipartisan attempts failed in 2006 and 2014, so there's a fat chance of getting anywhere in this political climate.
But the more I thought about it, nobody has done more to make clear how badly we need to rewrite federal immigration law than guess who.
President Trump.
Raids, the threat of more raids, and the promise to deport 3,000 people a day are sabotaging Trump's economic agenda and eroding his support among Latinos.
Restaurants have suffered, construction has slowed and fruit has rotted on vines as the promised crackdown on violent offenders - which would have had much more public support-instead turned into a heartless, destructive and costly eradication.
I wouldn't bet a nickel on Trump or his congressional lackeys to publicly admit to any of that. But there have been signs that the emperor is beginning to soften hard-line positions on deportations of working immigrants and student visas, sending his MAGA posse into convulsions.
"His heart isn't in the nativist purge the way the rest of his administration's heart is into it," the Cato Institute's director of immigration studies, David J. Bier, told the New York Times. Despite the tough talk, Bier said, Trump has "always had a soft spot for the economic needs from a business perspective."
So too, apparently, do some California GOP legislators.
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