CELEBRITY
Just in: OHIO’S GOP GOVERNOR WARNS BUSINESSES WILL SUFFER IF ILLEGAL HAITIANS GO HOME. Ohio’s Mike DeWine just said the quiet part out loud: he’s more worried about cheap foreign labor than the people who actually live in his state. His warning that jobs will go “unfilled” if Haitian migrants are deported tells you everything about who the political class really serves. Here’s the setup: the Biden DHS finally admits TPS for tens of thousands of Haitians ends in February 2026. The law is clear, the clock is ticking, and officials are even urging them to self-deport before ICE shows up.
🚨 Just in: OHIO’S GOP GOVERNOR WARNS BUSINESSES WILL SUFFER IF ILLEGAL HAITIANS GO HOME.
Ohio’s Mike DeWine just said the quiet part out loud: he’s more worried about cheap foreign labor than the people who actually live in his state.
His warning that jobs will go “unfilled” if Haitian migrants are deported tells you everything about who the political class really serves.
Here’s the setup: the Biden DHS finally admits TPS for tens of thousands of Haitians ends in February 2026.
The law is clear, the clock is ticking, and officials are even urging them to self-deport before ICE shows up.
But DeWine’s first instinct isn’t to ask how to get Ohioans back to work; it’s to protect a pipeline of low-wage labor for businesses that don’t want to raise pay or train American workers.
Translation: “We can’t run our economy unless we import people who will work for less. ” Meanwhile, Trump’s position has been perfectly consistent: a nation that can’t control its borders can’t protect its citizens, its wages, or its future.
DeWine sees “unfilled jobs”; Trump sees hollowed-out towns, stagnant wages, and Americans sidelined while politicians shrug.
Notice the irony: they call it “Temporary Protected Status,” then scream when the “temporary” part finally arrives.
Washington extends it, corporations get hooked on it, and suddenly enforcing the law is treated like an economic catastrophe.