Joe Rogan rips Trump administration’s ICE raids
Joe Rogan once again criticized the Trump administration’s immigration raids, telling a MAGA lawmaker on Wednesday that people were protesting deportations because they were thinking, “Great, you’re going to get rid of the landscaper.”
Rogan pressed Rep. Anna Paulina Luna to defend her claims about recent immigration protests and challenged the scope of federal enforcement, using his podcast to question whether the government has gone far beyond its promise to target dangerous offenders.
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During a conversation Wednesday on “The Joe Rogan Experience,” Luna, a Florida Republican, alleged that demonstrations against Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids in June were fueled by “Chinese money.”
Rogan said he was open to the idea, but reminded her that the public anger also reflected fear about how the raids were being carried out.
“I absolutely believe this is true,” he said, before adding, “but also, it was in reaction to some of the ICE raids.”
Rogan described why he thinks the response was so strong, arguing that people recoiled at the idea of officers grabbing ordinary workers.
“It was a visceral reaction that a lot of people had to the idea of people just showing up and pulling people out of schools and pulling people out of Home Depot and pulling people that were just hard-working people,” he said.
“That’s what freaks people out.”
He later summed up how many voters saw the administration’s pledge, saying the expectation was the removal of violent criminals rather than tradesmen and day laborers.
“When people thought about ICE, they thought, ‘Great, we’re going to get rid of the gang members,’ they didn’t think, ‘Great, you’re going to get rid of the landscaper.’”
The exchange underscored a growing split between tough rhetoric around border enforcement and what critics say is the reality on the ground.
Rogan has backed President Donald Trump and his hard-line agenda, but he has increasingly criticized how immigration sweeps have been conducted.
The podcast host pushed back on the familiar refrain that migrants should simply “get in line” legally, arguing that many of those doing low-wage work lack the resources to navigate the system.
“If you’re just a landscaper, you’re just a guy who lives in a third-world country and you want a better life, and you say, ‘I heard you can get across, and I heard when you get across you can get work,’—like what is that guy going to do?” he asked.
“That guy doesn’t have the money to hire a lawyer.”
Luna responded by pointing to the policies of the Biden and Obama administrations, but the two agreed on two themes often heard from both sides of the debate: companies should not rely on undocumented labor, and the border should be secure.
Last month, Rogan criticized enforcement tactics as overly broad, saying the focus has landed on the wrong targets.
“It’s insane,” he said on his show last month.
“The targeting of migrant workers—not cartel members, not gang members, not drug dealers. Just construction workers. Showing up in construction sites, raiding them. Gardeners. Like, really?”
He added, “I don’t think anybody would have signed up for that.”
Trump has repeatedly pledged to pursue “the worst of the worst,” but a review by ABC News shows that people without criminal records have increasingly been swept up, reinforcing Rogan’s argument that the practice no longer matches the promise.
While the podcast host praised Trump’s broader agenda, he has rejected aspects of its execution. He has also criticized the administration on unrelated issues, accusing it of “gaslighting” around the Jeffrey Epstein scandal.
According to the Associated Press, the large majority of those in ICE custody at the end of June had no criminal convictions, a data point that contrasts with campaign promises to focus on serious offenders.
A Department of Homeland Security spokesperson told The Post that “70% of ICE arrests are of illegal aliens who have charges or convictions in the US.”
“And that’s just the tip of the iceberg: that statistic does not account for foreign fugitives, terrorists, gang members, and human rights abusers or individuals who have criminal records in foreign countries,” the spokesperson added.
The Post has sought comment from Luna and the White House.
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