**FILE** Spaces in Action members at a 2023 rally, advocating for affordable health care for all and encouraging Washingtonians to check on their Medicaid status. Across the country, more than 20 million people rely on Affordable Care Act marketplace plans, and 93% receive premium tax credit assistance. Now, Congress is debating whether to continue offering the tax credit assistance, and millions face the threat of steep increases in monthly premiums. (Robert R. Roberts/The Washington Informer)
**FILE** Spaces in Action members at a 2023 rally, advocating for affordable health care for all and encouraging Washingtonians to check on their Medicaid status. Across the country, more than 20 million people rely on Affordable Care Act marketplace plans, and 93% receive premium tax credit assistance. Now, Congress is debating whether to continue offering the tax credit assistance, and millions face the threat of steep increases in monthly premiums. (Robert R. Roberts/The Washington Informer)

A sweeping Trump administration proposal to replace deported immigrant farmworkers with Medicaid recipients is drawing fierce condemnation in the District of Columbia, where Black residents make up a significant share of the programโ€™s enrollees and would be disproportionately affected.

Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins this week described the administrationโ€™s plan in blunt terms, telling reporters that โ€œwith 34 million people, able-bodied adults on Medicaid, we should be able to do that fairly quickly.โ€ Rollins insisted there would be โ€œno amnestyโ€ for undocumented farmworkers and characterized Medicaid as a reservoir of replacement labor.

Health policy experts and civil rights groups are warning the proposal amounts to a form of coerced work and would be catastrophic for low-income D.C. residents who rely on Medicaid to survive.

According to the Kaiser Family Foundationโ€™s analysis of the American Community Survey, 40.9% of Medicaid enrollees in D.C. are Black, compared to 36.7% who are White. Another 22.4% fall into other racial and ethnic categories, including Latino and Asian residents.

โ€œThis is a policy that explicitly targets poor Black and brown residents of the District,โ€ said a local civil rights advocate. โ€œThey are taking a program that exists to guarantee health care and twisting it into a list of people they believe should be forced into field labor.โ€

While Rollins framed the idea as a way to move toward โ€œ100% American participation,โ€ Medicaid enrollees in D.C. are overwhelmingly working-age adults, parents, and children. In 2023:

  • 28% of Medicaid recipients were 18 and younger
  • 19% were between 19 and 26
  • 29% were between 27 and 44
  • 22% were between 45 and 64
  • 11% were 65 and older

Advocates note that many adults on Medicaid already work low-wage jobs that do not offer insurance, care for children or aging relatives, or live with chronic health conditions.

President Trump has also floated proposals to require farmers to house and directly supervise migrant laborers to shield employers from ICE raids, a policy critics say would institutionalize indentured servitude. Rollinsโ€™ remarks suggest the administration now aims to go further, using Medicaid as a tool to conscript Americans into agricultural labor.

The White House has not answered questions about how the plan would operate in D.C., where Medicaid enrollment remains a cornerstone of public health and disproportionately serves the communities most at risk of poverty.

Health law experts say no federal statute allows Medicaid benefits to be conditioned on mandatory employment, and any such requirement would almost certainly face constitutional challenges under the 13th Amendmentโ€™s ban on involuntary servitude.

โ€œThis is not a workforce strategy โ€” itโ€™s an attempt to rebrand exploitation as economic policy,โ€ said a public health researcher in Washington. โ€œThe idea that you can strip people of their dignity and health coverage if they donโ€™t go pick vegetables is horrifying.โ€

Rollins did not specify how the policy would be implemented or whether Medicaid recipients who refused farm work would lose their benefits. But she was unequivocal about the administrationโ€™s intent.

โ€œThere are plenty of workers in America,โ€ she said Tuesday.

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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4 Comments

  1. Right to work(exploitation) at the upmost extreme circumstances. But that’s the thing people would rather go without or straight up die then to put up with enduntured servitude like that. It’s not going to work the way the hope. We’re not going to replace your farmers ever . So in reality the rich are gonna be the ones going without… FOOD and CLOTHING. The common people will look out for each other as communities always do. But NO ONE is gonna be looking out for these rich totalitarian fascists. So shoot yourselves in the foot. We the people say bring it on!

  2. The idea of forcing recipients of federal assistance programs to replace immigrant labor has been a dream of many on the right since at least Reagan and the cruel out of touch meme of the “welfare queen,” probably longer (I began to develop any beginning inkling of politics when Carter was president). When trying to teach MAGA voters the realities of our immigration system currently, and the impacts it would have on farm work, hospitality industry, restaurants, etc., the immediate answer was, “Oh that’s easy. You just end benefits for all the lazy people and they will work when they don’t have any other choice.”

    There are so many problems with that – from forcing people in poverty to relocate to whether or not they were capable of some of the jobs being abandoned by migrants. As I keep hearing (and seeing) – with those in power currently, the cruelty is the point.

  3. I agree that forced labor of any kind, (even for incarcerated) is exploitation and therefore wrong. It seems clear that prior to the absurd immigration policies and enforced deportation efforts, migrant workers were also exploited and oppressed. What is the solution to providing food for ourselves in a fair and sustainable way?

  4. This is terrible! A precursor to a return of slavery. I am so sick of this administration.

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