Tags: trump | jobs | americans | migrants

Trump: 284K More Americans, 87K Fewer Migrants Working

Trump: 284K More Americans, 87K Fewer Migrants Working
President Donald Trump speaks from the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., on March 7, 2025. (Jim Watson/Getty Images)

By    |   Friday, 07 March 2025 04:51 PM EST

President Trump praised the February jobs report for indicating that American-born workers gained 284,000 more jobs, while jobs held by foreign-born workers contracted by 87,000, Brietbart reports.

“Big gains for native-born Americans,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office Friday. “For the first time in 15 months, the job gains for native-born Americans, people born in America, exceeded job gains for migrant and foreign-born workers.”

Illegal migrants took nearly five million jobs that would otherwise have gone to Americans in the past four years, hitting people with poor job records the hardest, Trump said. All the while Americans were being sidelined from the workforce, Biden boasted of his job-creation numbers.

“Now you’ve heard the same stat where foreign workers were taking up all the jobs, or almost all the jobs, in some [months],” Trump added. “So these are incredible numbers.”

During the Biden administration, when inflation rose a cumulative 21.3%, Americans lost earning power in the labor in the labor and housing markets, as well as workplace productivity and training.

White-collar jobs and factory jobs were outsourced, while local communities became unstable due to progressive policies such as Defund the Police and Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, says Steve Camarota, a researcher at the Center for Immigration Studies.

Further, as expanding blocs of migrants-turned-ethnic-voters demanded benefits, native-born Americans lost political power, Camaraota says.

There is room for more improvement for native-born Americans in the labor market, as current data shows that the share of Americans with jobs remains at historic lows.

For instance, Camarota notes, the labor force participation of U.S.-born men without a bachelor’s degree between the ages of 18 and 64 is 75.6%, down from 80.6% in 2006 and nearly 90% in the 1960s, according to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Lee Barney

Lee Barney, Newsmax’s financial editor, has been a financial journalist for 30 years, covering the economy, retirement planning, investing and financial technology.

© 2025 Newsmax Finance. All rights reserved.


StreetTalk
President Trump praised the February jobs report for indicating that American-born workers gained 284,000 more jobs, while jobs held by foreign-born workers contracted by 87,000, Brietbart reports.
trump, jobs, americans, migrants
296
2025-51-07
Friday, 07 March 2025 04:51 PM
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