American workers are finally winning again. Jobless claims have plummeted to near-historic lows as President Trump's crackdown on mass immigration forces employers to value the workers they already have instead of constantly seeking cheaper foreign replacements.
The numbers tell the story that the mainstream media won't: without the Biden regime's flood of three million new workers arriving annually in his final years, employers are suddenly deciding to keep their current American employees in place. What a concept – putting Americans first actually works!
For four years under Biden, working families watched helplessly as waves of illegal immigrants and foreign workers drove down wages and job security. Biden's open borders weren't just a national security disaster – they were economic warfare against the American worker.
The America First Difference
This dramatic shift didn't happen by accident. It's the direct result of Trump's Day One executive orders ending catch-and-release, resuming deportations, and sending a clear message that the era of exploiting foreign labor is over.
"Without the assurance of millions of new workers arriving," employers are finally treating American workers with the respect they deserve. This is exactly what Trump promised on the campaign trail – that securing our borders would immediately benefit American families.
"We're not just securing our border, we're securing good-paying American jobs," Trump declared during his inauguration. The results speak for themselves.
While Democrats and their media allies predicted economic disaster from Trump's immigration policies, the opposite is happening. American workers now have leverage they haven't had in years. Companies can't simply threaten to replace them with the next bus load of cheap labor.
Working Families Finally Win
This is what happens when you put America First instead of globalist corporate interests. Every American worker who was told they were "replaceable" under Biden is now seeing their true value recognized in the marketplace.
The question isn't whether Trump's policies are working – the data proves they are. The question is why it took so long to get a president willing to fight for American workers over corporate profits and political correctness.
