Our goal in this paper is to identify how recent escalations in immigration enforcement and changes in migration practices affect the ability of the state to continue to serve two of its key productive functions: protecting capital accumulation within industry and ensuring the state's own political legitimacy in the eyes of the public. We draw on our ethnographic research on Latino migrant dairy farm workers in Wisconsin to examine the ways in which a group of migrant workers experiences the process of being enforced as illegal bodies. We find that migrant dairy workers palpable sense of deportability articulates with the specific structure of dairy work in ways that make the economically and politically ideal migrant: compliant at work and invisible otherwise.