WASHINGTON — Elizabeth Kautz says she now carries her passport around the Minneapolis suburb where she's been the mayor since 1995.
''Those ICE agents don't know that I'm the mayor of the city of Burnsville,'' Kautz, a Republican who has occasionally diverted from the Trump administration's views, said Wednesday as the United States Conference of Mayors opened its meeting in Washington. ''I could be coming out of a store and be harassed so I need to make sure that I have credentials on me.''
Her comments reflected a sense of frustration and exasperation hanging over the gathering of mayors, which would typically be a venue for leaders to strategize over issues ranging from affordable housing and transit to climate change and addressing urban violence.
But much of that was overshadowed by the fallout from the killing of Alex Jeffrey Pretti by two federal agents in Minneapolis on Saturday, reigniting a national debate over the Trump administration's aggressive law enforcement tactics, which have often focused on cities.
''There has been no more urgent challenge facing all Americans these past few weeks than the chaos in Minnesota stemming from an unprecedented surge in immigration enforcement,'' said Oklahoma City Mayor David Holt, a Republican who is the conference's president this year.
Multiple mayors said they appreciated President Donald Trump's nod this week toward deescalating the federal government's operation in Minnesota, adding that they agreed with the administration's goal of deporting undocumented immigrants who have committed crimes.
But they also described a dynamic in which they're facing pressure from constituents to evict federal agents from their cities — something they can't do — while struggling to align with federal counterparts.
The surge has had a notable impact even in cities that haven't faced the brunt of the federal government's pressure like Minneapolis.