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by Apprentice (1.8k points)
Farmers overwhelmingly support Trump and Trump supports them. He can and will increase seasonal worker visas if they need them.
ago by (150 points)
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This is in fact true. If we look at the map of the United States of America and what counties voted for who, the places where farmers live were all red indicating they voted for Trump. There are even videos of Trump himself saying that he loves farmers. Indicating that this is true.
https://www.cnn.com/2020/02/02/politics/farmer-policy-trump-2020-campaign/index.html

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by Novice (920 points)
selected ago by
 
Best answer

The claim itself is biased/opinionated in phrasing, but the farmer support and seasonal work visas claims are technically correct. 

Rural voters did largely vote for Trump according the 2024 AP VoteCast (around 63%, a 3% increase from the 2020 election). According to a poll from AgWeb, >70% farmers favored Trump's abilities regarding issues including inflation, farm policy and crop insurance, and trade expansion. 

As for supporting farmers via seasonal worker visas: While Trump hasn't spoken on increasing seasonal worker visas since his re-election, there is precedent to believe he would. "Seasonal work" visas fall under the H-2A program, which allows for 10 months of agricultural work. In his first term, Trump expanded the temporary work visa programs by 13%, according to FERM. That being said, "roughly half of hired crop farmworkers lack legal immigration status" (ERS), and according to the Trump's mass deportation plan, which is now underway, these farm workers would all be deported. It's expected that Trump will expand the H-2A program to meet this agricultural labor deficit. "The administration has signaled plans to expand these programs to meet labor shortages in agriculture and hospitality, while imposing stricter compliance requirements on employers." (EconoTimes) Brooke Rollins, Trump's pick to lead the USDA, said she "would work with lawmakers to modernize a temporary visa program for farmworkers." (New York Times)

AP VoteCast: A visual explainer of how key groups voted in 2024 | AP News

Presidential Poll Results: How Farmers and Economists View Candidates' Impact on Agriculture - AgWeb

How Trump’s deportation plan could actually increase migrant labor | Food and Environment Reporting Network

Farm Labor | Economic Research Service

Brooke Rollins, Trump’s Agriculture Pick, Addresses Tariff and Immigration Impact on Farmers - The New York Times

What changes will Donald Trump make to visa programs during his second term? - EconoTimes

True
ago by Innovator (51.8k points)
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You did a really nice job on this fact-check by including legitimate sources and extracting the most relevant data/quotes.
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ago by Novice (640 points)

The claim that “farmers overwhelmingly support Trump” is true. According to a graphic from Investigate Midwest, in the 2024 election, Trump won all but 11 of the 444 farming-dependent counties, with an average of 77.7% backing him. Regarding seasonal worker visas, which fall under the H-2A program, Trump previously expedited their processing during his first term (The Guardian) and stated in his campaign that H-2A labor is a “source of legal and verified labor for agriculture” (Investigate Midwest). This indicates past support for the program. However, since being re-elected, Trump has not explicitly addressed H-2A visas. Trump may expand the existing H-2 visa program to replace the labor force removed by his current mass deportation plan seeing as about 40% of US farmworkers are undocumented, according to FERN. However, the Project 2025 plan which former Trump administration officials authored proposes phasing down the H-2A visa program (The Guardian), so if Project 2025 were to be enacted, the number of H-2A visas would be reduced. Therefore, it is unclear whether Trump would actually support increasing seasonal worker visas at this time.  

https://investigatemidwest.org/2024/11/13/trump-election-farming-counties-trade-war/

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/dec/07/trump-immigration-trade-policy-farmer-votes

https://thefern.org/2025/01/how-trumps-deportation-plan-could-actually-increase-migrant-labor/

https://investigatemidwest.org/2024/11/15/us-could-rely-more-on-foreign-ag-workers-under-trump-high-demand-is-already-straining-the-government/

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/nov/11/mass-deportations-food-chain-california

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ago by Innovator (51.8k points)
0 0
You did a fantastic job finding reputable sources, relevant data, and pertinent information on this matter. Nice fact-check!
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ago by Newbie (320 points)
Farming dependent counties support for trump increased by 2% since the 2020 election with a total of 77.7% supporting him in 2025. Farm dependent counties are places with at least 25% of annual income deriving from farming, and/or 16% of jobs are in farming.

It actually is true that Trumps administration will need to increase their handouts of migrant worker visas, especially if trump proceeds with his deportation policies. Since at least 70% of agricultural workers are foreign born and around 40% are undocumented, forcing these people to leave the US would cause major problems in the functionality of food industry.

H-2 programs create seasonal work visas for "unskilled workers". H-2A workers are specifically brought in for agriculture help. The Food and environment Reporting Network says "the number of H-2A workers that farmers brought into the country spiked by over 64 percent between 2017 and 2022 and has continued to grow" . Though there are a lot of problems with mistreatment by authority in these programs, their existence will not diminish, but will rather most likely expand during Trump's term. Since the US's food system is so reliant on migrant workers, even with deportation, H-2 visas will need to be available as to prevent a huge loss of production. [3] In fact, Trumps administration has already planned to expand these programs to help face labor shortages.

[1]https://investigatemidwest.org/2024/11/13/trump-election-farming-counties-trade-war/

[2]https://thefern.org/2025/01/how-trumps-deportation-plan-could-actually-increase-migrant-labor/

[3]https://www.econotimes.com/What-changes-will-Donald-Trump-make-to-visa-programs-during-his-second-term-1698165
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ago by Novice (610 points)

This claim is actually phrased in a way that makes it subjective and up for opinion. By stating that farmers gave "overwhelming support" to Trump it allows people to have their own opinion about what overwhelming looks like. However, with that being said there is a strong correlation between farmers and Trump voters. In fact according to the election results in farming counties 77% voted for Trump in 2024. A very large percentage of the farmers did indeed vote for Trump and he even grew his support 2 points from last election cycle. This revelation is a surprise to much of the population because of Trump's promise to deport many of the farm laborers in the illegal immigrants and his mass deportation policy. But Trumps promise to focus on deporting criminals first and his willingness to grant H-2A visas where laborers are allowed to live in the US and fill the labor jobs that farmers need really struck a cord with the voters. Much of the rural community supports this idea of the work visas that Trump is employing and its evident in the results of the election. 

In conclusion, this claim has some truth to it but it cannot be considered a full truth due to the opinion based nature of the claim. 

Articles:https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-farm-groups-want-trump-spare-their-workers-deportation-2024-11-25/

https://investigatemidwest.org/2024/11/13/trump-election-farming-counties-trade-war/

https://www.mprnews.org/story/2025/01/30/despite-trump-immigration-policy-experts-say-the-h2a-program-is-on-solid-footing-for-now

Can't be true or false (Opinion, poem, etc.)

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