Donald Trump’s campaign to emigrate destroys the famous tourism industry in Las Vegas and stops the workers who keep it, according to union leaders and industry.
and estimated 25 percent of all Nevada workers were born abroad, compared to 17 percent in America as a whole. Migrant workers are especially dominant in the tourism and hospitality industries, where they were born 74 percent of home schools abroad, and 51 percent of restaurant lines chefs.
But local activists now say that allocated immigration and enforcement employees are holding about 40 percent of people daily in the south of Nevada from last year, although 69 percent of them have no criminal convictions.
Ted Babjurg, Secretary of the Local Chapter Treasurer of the Union of Cooking Workers, Tell Fox 5 Vegas The increase in belief has planted fear throughout the city’s hospitality sector.
“This industry cannot work without migrant workers.”
Michael Kagan, director of the University of Nevada, the Las Vegas immigration clinic, said that the calls to his group were “more than three times” and that the employees “could not keep up with.”
He told Fox 5: “This type of fear is incredibly destroyed by our neighbors for our society, for our economy.”
An example of this is the Broadacres Market, a famous outdoor market in North Las Vegas, which was Closed since June 21 In order to protect sellers and customers from immigration raids.
At the same time, the authority of the Las Vegas agreement and its visitors I mentioned Las Vegas visitors decreased by 6.5 percent in May compared to the same month in 2024, when hotels were achieved by 5.7 percent of money.
This is a mirror of the situation throughout the United States of America, where foreign tourism spending is expected to decrease by 7 percent this year due to travelers’ concerns about detention or distance from the border.
The agreement of the Convention and visitors has not attributed a shortage of SIN CITY to migration concerns specifically, instead, noting the comprehensive economic depression due to Trump’s tariff. “At the heart of what we think is happening now is that consumer confidence has decreased significantly,” The CEO of the Authority, Steve Hill, said in May.

However, Papageorge said that visits from Canadian and Mexican clients had “fell on a cliff” specifically, while visitors to Latin are “afraid and nervous.”
“When this happens, this means that our visit has decreased and that companies are looking to lay off potential workers. Our members feel very anxious,” he said.
The Trump administration targeted hotels, restaurants and farms specifically Because it seeks to fulfill the Trump campaign’s promise “collective deportation”.