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US visa crackdown: Hotels order 36% more background checks on foreign staff
The company, which tracks hiring trends across a thousand hotels, linked the surge to heightened immigration scrutiny following President Donald Trump's return to office.
'Companies are certainly far more cognisant of that than they've ever been, and they don't want to be caught up in or be accused of lax hiring practices when it comes to verification of immigration status,' Patrick Scholes, hotel equity analyst at Truist told Reuters.
The spike in background checks comes just weeks after the US Department of Homeland Security reversed its previous guidance and allowed Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to resume workplace raids at farms, hotels and restaurants. The earlier restriction had been in place since the Biden administration.
Meanwhile, Hireology said in a blog post that background checks were a cornerstone of any effective hiring strategy. "They ensure that candidates meet the qualifications for the role, protect your organisation from potential risks, and help you build a safe, compliant, and high-performing workforce. Negligent hiring can have serious consequences, from legal liabilities to reputational damage," it said.
The change has intensified pressure on hotel managers who are already grappling with post-pandemic staff shortages. The US Travel Association says immigrants make up at least one-third of workers in the country's travel industry. Among frontline hotel jobs, the share is even higher—34 per cent of housekeepers and 24 per cent of cooks are foreign-born, based on 2023 data from the US Census Bureau and Tourism Economics.
In 2024, hotels directly employed over 2.15 million people, according to the American Hotel and Lodging Association. Hireology reported that total hiring across the hotels it monitors rose 22 per cent to over 8,000 workers between January and June 2025. But hiring for critical roles such as front desk staff, cleaners and kitchen workers was mostly flat compared to the previous year.
Trump signals shift after backlash from rural employers
President Trump has publicly acknowledged the strain that his immigration crackdown is placing on sectors like hospitality and agriculture. Speaking at a White House event on June 12, he said, 'Our farmers are being hurt badly... and we're going to have to do something about that. We're going to have an order on that pretty soon, I think... and leisure, too—hotels.'
He repeated the message on Truth Social, writing: 'Our great Farmers and people in the Hotel and Leisure business have been stating that our very aggressive policy on immigration is taking very good, long time workers away from them, with those jobs being almost impossible to replace.'
Trump has also claimed that many recent arrivals under the Biden administration are now seeking work in these industries. 'This is not good,' he wrote. 'We must protect our Farmers, but get the CRIMINALS OUT OF THE USA. Changes are coming.'
Trump's broader immigration agenda includes ending temporary legal status for hundreds of thousands of migrants and deporting millions of undocumented people. For US hotels, the message is clear: background checks and hiring practices are now under closer watch.
As a result, hotel managers are increasingly turning to verification systems to shield themselves from potential fines, reputational damage or legal fallout. Analysts say the shift marks a break from earlier norms, where enforcement was often lax and many employers turned a blind eye to undocumented workers.

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Since the 1980s, Trump has believed that other countries have ripped off the U.S., producing deep trade deficits. His solution: charge for access to the U.S. market and the protection of its military. Others have now accepted his terms for access to the market, while NATO partners have agreed to boost defense spending to 5% of GDP. This seems to have softened Trump's prior antipathy toward the alliance and Ukraine. On Monday, he shortened the deadline for Russia to agree to a cease-fire with Ukraine or face sanctions. It might be too soon to announce 'mission accomplished," but it certainly looks like Trump has begun rebalancing the relationship between the U.S. and its allies. 'The two concerns Trump had about Europe is that they were free riding on the U.S. security umbrella and their trade was unbalanced, with their market a fortress," said Mujtaba Rahman, managing director for Europe at Eurasia Group, a consultancy. 'On both, Trump has implemented a shakedown." The 15% baseline tariff and 5% military commitment represent Trump wins that put the trans-Atlantic alliance on a 'slightly more solid" basis than in February, he said. Whether tariffs achieve Trump's economic goals remains to be seen. In a recent speech, Trump's trade ambassador, Jamieson Greer, set three benchmarks: first, reduce the goods trade deficit; second, raise after-inflation incomes; and third, boost manufacturing's share of gross domestic product. The incentives in these deals to reshore production and purchase American goods should help meet these relatively low bars. As for how much of the tariffs consumers will ultimately bear, the jury is still out. From 1947 through 2012, the U.S. presided over a steady fall in trade barriers and growing economic integration. It came through painstakingly negotiated pacts. Everyone gained something and gave something up and were thus invested in the pacts' success. Such pacts 'require Congress to approve them, are deep and substantive, take a long time to negotiate, and last a long time," said Doug Irwin, a trade historian at Dartmouth College. 'They are a binding commitment on the U.S." By contrast, Irwin said, these latest agreements are 'handshake deals" with a president who isn't legally bound to adhere to the terms. Trump is at liberty to threaten higher tariffs again for any reason, from wresting Greenland from Denmark to protecting U.S. tech companies from European taxes or censorship. Europe, having foresworn retaliation, has few chips with which to bargain tariffs down, under this or a future president. Trump acted entirely without Congress. Indeed, one court has already ruled his use of a sanctions law to impose across-the-board tariffs was illegal. Should an appeals court uphold that finding, the legality of those deals would come into doubt. (Trump could turn to a different law that limits tariffs to 15%, for 150 days.) The one-sided nature of these deals also makes them more fragile. Other countries will be less willing to comply with something they don't think is in their economic interest, especially with so many details unsettled. Already, Japan has cast doubt on Trump's interpretation of its $550 billion investment commitment, and the Europeans' $600 billion pledge seems similarly vague. Deals made under duress are politically unpopular and thus less durable. Especially noteworthy was the negative reaction of far-right populist leaders who are already hostile to the EU and trade deals. Marine Le Pen, a leader of France's populist right-wing National Rally, which is slightly favored to win the presidential election in 2027, called the EU deal a 'political, economic and moral fiasco." Alice Weidel, leader of Germany's far-right Alternative for Germany, wrote on X, 'The EU has let itself be brutally ripped off." Trump got his deals because of the leverage other countries' deep economic and security ties gave to the U.S. In coming years, that leverage will wane as those countries cultivate markets elsewhere and build up their own militaries. The resulting international system will be less dependent on the U.S.—and less stable. Write to Greg Ip at