By Kevin D. Williamson
Wednesday, June 18, 2025
Donald Trump is a remarkably weak man. Consider his
administration’s constant immigration flip-flopping.
Immigration—illegal immigration most specifically and
urgently, but immigration in general, too—is the reason Donald J. Trump,
game-show host and cameo performer in porn films, is president of these United
States. In a world in which the immigration issue had been treated seriously by
Republicans (or—ho, ho!—by Democrats), Trump never would have been the 2016
nominee and never would have been president. Trade has long been Trump’s No. 1
issue, but immigration has been a close No. 2 for about a decade. Ironic, then,
that his trade and immigration policies change every 15 minutes.
Sometimes, we get TACO Trump—TACO being Wall Street’s reassuring
acronym: Trump Always Chickens Out. He has done that a lot with tariffs,
but he also did it (for a few hours, at least) with the recent immigration
crackdown, presumably after someone
explained to him that his policies were creating problems for farmers,
restaurateurs, and hoteliers, all of whom rely heavily on immigrant workforces
and some of whom employ a non-trivial number of illegal immigrants. “Our great
Farmers and people in the Hotel and Leisure business have been stating that our
very aggressive policy on immigration is taking very good, long time workers
away from them, with those jobs being almost impossible to replace,” Trump wrote
last week. So—TACO?
Not so fast. Trump un-TACO’d his own TACO—or at least he
tried to.
No, this isn’t TACO Trump at all—this is Lord Derby of
Jamaica Estates. The original Lord Derby was a famously weak-willed and
vacillating British politician of whom it was said: “Like the feather pillow,
bears the marks of the last person who has sat on him.” (That observation came
from the rather steelier Earl Haig, commander of the British forces at the
Battle of the Somme.) After telling ICE late
last week to lay off on the meatpacking plants and hotels, the Trump
administration belayed
that order after the weekend and insisted that raids and deportations would
continue. And then the administration did what everybody who has been paying
attention expected, i.e., it re-TACO’d the un-TACO’d TACO while pretending that
the whole immigration enchilada was still on the menu.
How’s that? Homeland Security spokeswoman Tricia
McLaughlin announced:
“There will be no safe spaces for industries who harbor violent criminals or
purposely try to undermine ICE’s efforts.” Let me translate that into English
for you: Tracking down illegals is really, really hard work, and this is an
administration that hates hard work, so, instead, the administration will wait
for state and local authorities to do the work of arresting and prosecuting
violent criminals and then prioritize deporting those violent criminals—which
was the policy of the Biden
administration and the policy of the Obama
administration.
More mush from
the wimp, as someone once put it.
You’ll know that some future president is serious about
dealing with illegal immigration when he sets aside talk of “comprehensive”
reform and just signs mandatory E-Verify into
law and puts some resources into beefing up its database to more efficiently
deal with stolen Social Security numbers and the like. E-Verify is a system
used to screen employment candidates at the time of hiring to ensure that they
are legally entitled to work in the United States. It is required for federal
contractors and public
employers in some states, but in most states, there is no rule requiring
private employers to verify worker eligibility. Generally, E-Verify is not
mandatory, and the reason it is not mandatory is the same reason Congress has
effectively gutted debt-control measures such as the old Gramm-Rudman-Hollings
Balanced Budget Act, which imposes automatic spending cuts to enforce deficit
reduction: because it works.
Mandatory E-Verify would not only screen illegal
immigrants from regular work—thereby reducing the attractive
nuisance that drives much of illegal immigration—but it would also make it
easier to prosecute employers who cynically exploit illegal immigration to keep
their workforces cheap and docile. And that is what really needs doing.
One of the truly enraging aspects of our national policy
conversation is hearing from the same supposedly hard-nosed capitalistic
bootstrapping “self-reliance” Republicans—the ones who insist on work
requirements for single mothers receiving welfare benefits—that meatpacking
bosses and agribusiness CEOs and hotel owners cannot be expected to comply with
federal law when it comes to hiring.
Oh, the despair! “We can’t get workers!” the poor
gentlemen of the C-suite lament. But that isn’t true: They just cannot get the
workers they want at the below-market wages they offer without illegal workers
in the mix bringing down overall labor prices. If you cannot turn a profit
without breaking the law, you don’t have a business—you have a criminal
enterprise. Forget all that talk about a $50 side of guacamole, because this
isn’t about the price of avocados—it’s about the price
of a boat slip on Fisher Island.
Trump’s problem is that he doesn’t have the guts to stand
up to the corporate executives (many of whom hold him, not without reason, in
utter contempt) or the huevos to stand up to the immigration hawks in
his administration (most of whom believe, not without reason, that they can
bully him into compliance). Lacking both principle and courage, he lurches from
one thing to the other. And so we get, by turns, Commander TACO and Lord
Feather-Cushion.
So, here’s an immigration agenda most of us could get
behind: Enforce the law. Pay market wages. And quit electing these gutless,
gormless clowns.
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