Biden Labor pick under fire after official called farmers ‘traffickers’

President Biden’s nominee for the position of labor secretary has come under more fire from Republican senators after one of her underlings disparaged American farmers as “traffickers” and accused them of “wage theft.”

In a Monday letter to acting secretary Julie Su, seen by The Post, Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) raised comments by a senior Department of Labor official attacking the federal H-2A visa program, which temporarily lets farmers hire non-immigrant agricultural workers when US citizens are unavailable.

Mike Rios, who serves as regional enforcement coordinator at the department’s Wage and Hour Division, called those who use the program “traffickers” and said the program amounted to “the purchase of humans to perform difficult work under terrible conditions, sometimes including subhuman living conditions,” according to an April 14 report from the left-wing outlet Prism.

“You can throw a rock and hit a violation in the agricultural industry,” Rios also said, telling the outlet that wage theft was “baked into” the federal program.

In a separate podcast interview, Rios also described the H-2A program as “literally buying people to come to do terrible work.”

Cassidy — the top Republican on the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee — and Sen. Tedd Budd (R-NC) told Su they found Rios’ remarks “troubling.”

Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee Ranking Member Bill Cassidy (R-La.) slammed Julie Su’s “startling” bias against US farmers.
Getty Images

Acting Labor Secretary Julie Su
A senior official at the Department of Labor disparaged the federal H-2A visa program, prompting the Republican senators to question Biden’s Labor pick.
Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

“Mr. Rios’s claim that the H-2A program is equivalent to human slavery … finds no support in law or fact. It is also inflammatory and unbecoming of a senior federal official,” they wrote.

“This bias against the H-2A program appears to be part of a disturbing pattern during and before your tenure at DOL that demonstrates a disregard for the even-handed enforcement of our nation’s laws.”

Cassidy and Budd further stressed that if Rios’ comments were accurate, Su was either neglecting her duties — or exhibiting a “startling bias against American farmers.”


Sen. Tod Budd (R-NC)
In a joint letter to Su, Cassidy, and Sen. Tedd Budd (R-NC), pictured, called Rios’ remarks “troubling.”
Getty Images

President Biden with Julie Su
Biden nominated Su in February to head the Labor Department, despite her role in overseeing billions of dollars worth of fraudulent handouts as California’s labor chief.
The Washington Post via Getty Images

“If the officials tasked with enforcing the H-2A program believe the system amounts to ‘wage theft’ and ‘the purchase of humans to perform difficult work under terrible conditions,’ then either DOL is currently unable to competently enforce the law or these statements reflect a startling bias against American farmers who use the program,” they wrote.

“As Acting Secretary, it is your responsibility to ensure that federal law is enforced fairly and without bias or prejudice.” 

Federal law requires farmers to pay H-2A workers “a wage that is at least the highest of” the Adverse Effect Wage Rate, meaning foreign laborers earn no less than US agricultural workers, Cassidy and Budd noted.


Farm laborers
Federal law requires farmers to pay H-2A workers “a wage that is at least the highest of” the Adverse Effect Wage Rate, meaning they could earn no less than US agricultural workers.
Getty Images

Additionally, they said, farmers who employ the hired hands must provide housing and cover the costs of transportation from a worker’s home country to the US.

The US has about 9.9 million job openings and just 5.8 million unemployed workers, according to the latest data from the Chamber of Commerce.

Rios’ remarks may complicate Su’s confirmation vote in the Senate, which a GOP aide told The Post could come as soon as this week.


Julie Su
Rios’ remarks may complicate Su’s confirmation vote in the Senate, which a GOP aide told The Post could come as soon as this week.
Getty Images

Biden nominated Su in February to become the full-fledged head of the Labor Department, despite her overseeing billions of dollars worth of fraudulent COVID-19 unemployment handouts as California’s labor chief.

If confirmed, Su would replace former Labor Secretary Marty Walsh, who left the administration in March to head the National Hockey League Players Association.

Republicans on the committee have previously expressed worries that Su did not conduct her duties impartially while serving as deputy to Labor Secretary Marty Walsh or as California’s labor secretary.

The senators have given Su until May 19 to clarify the Labor Department’s “role in enforcing the H-2A program” and ask whether she agreed with or knew about and planned a response to Rios’ comments before Prism’s report.



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