
Miriam Jordan
National Immigration Correspondant at The New York Times
National Immigration Correspondent, The New York Times. [email protected] Send tips & thoughts!
Articles
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1 week ago |
nytimes.com | Tyler Pager |Miriam Jordan |Hamed Aleaziz |Emmett Lindner
You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load. Trump officials insist the president is fully committed to mass deportation. But they have been careful not to directly contradict the president’s attempt to offer a reprieve to certain businesses. An immigration agent making an arrest last month in Miami.
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1 week ago |
bostonglobe.com | Tyler Pager |Miriam Jordan |Hamed Aleaziz |Zolan Kanno-Youngs
WASHINGTON — On Wednesday morning, President Trump took a call from Brooke Rollins, his secretary of agriculture, who relayed a growing sense of alarm from the heartland. Farmers and agriculture groups, she said, were increasingly uneasy about his immigration crackdown. Federal agents had begun to aggressively target worksites in recent weeks, with the goal of sharply bolstering the number of arrests and deportations of immigrants living in the country illegally.
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1 week ago |
charlotteobserver.com | Miriam Jordan |Soumya Karlamangla |Shawn Hubler |Emily Baumgaertner |Orlando D. Mayorquin |Matt Stevens
David Huerta, a prominent union leader who was arrested at an immigration protest, speaks after being released on bail in downtown Los Angeles on Monday, June 9, 2025. A video of Huerta's arrest shows a federal agent pushing him while his hands were at his hips. He fell to the ground and then taken to the hospital to be treated for a head injury. In California labor circles, news of his arrest spread within seconds.
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1 week ago |
miamiherald.com | Tyler Pager |Miriam Jordan |Hamed Aleaziz |Zolan Kanno-Youngs |NYT Washington
WASHINGTON — On Wednesday morning, President Donald Trump took a call from Brooke Rollins, his secretary of agriculture, who relayed a growing sense of alarm from the heartland. Farmers and agriculture groups, she said, were increasingly uneasy about his immigration crackdown. Federal agents had begun to aggressively target worksites in recent weeks, with the goal of sharply bolstering the number of arrests and deportations of immigrants living in the country illegally.
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1 week ago |
mahoningmatters.com | Miriam Jordan |Soumya Karlamangla |Shawn Hubler |Emily Baumgaertner
LOS ANGELES — It was the morning shift at Ambiance Apparel, a clothing wholesaler on the edge of Los Angeles’ fashion district, and along with a crowded showroom of mannequins and women’s skirts was a sprawling warehouse, where immigrant workers were bustling about. On any other day, the inventory would have flowed smoothly, from folded piles to cardboard boxes stacked on wooden pallets to be loaded onto trucks.
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NU! Millions of immigrants are carrying a Red Card the size of a credit card . It can make the difference between staying in this US or being deported. My latest: https://t.co/dufnL9GulT via @NYTimes

NEW: Trump's contested birthright citizenship order also targets people lawfully in the country, and it is sowing stress and confusion. My latest: https://t.co/YkiDkYfF5C

NU! Rumors of immigration raids are causing panic -- disrupting daily lives and hurting businesses. But will Trump's tactics induce people to self deport? My latest with great colleagues @haleaziz @hknightsf https://t.co/O6wVW7Mb5X