The Trump administration’s immigration crackdown in Minnesota has driven outrage among the state’s top Democratic officials, broad concern among progressive residents, and protests by activists and groups left unsettled as federal agents delve deeper into the state’s communities.
For many Minnesota conservatives, it’s a chance to cheer on a president who is delivering on a central message of his campaign and his entire career in politics.
“We’re getting what we voted for,” said Grant Johnson, chair of a local Republican Party chapter in the western Twin Cities suburbs.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement claims that “Operation Metro Surge,” the enforcement action that began earlier this month, has resulted in more than 400 arrests. It’s drawn condemnation from some community leaders and many Democratic elected officials.
Minnesota is just the latest Democratic-led state where federal officials have sent in agents. Other high-profile deployments to major U.S. cities, including Los Angeles and Chicago, have resulted in more than 600,000 deportations.
A sampling of Republicans from around Minnesota who spoke with the Minnesota Star Tribune praised President Donald Trump for sending federal agents to the state. Several said they were unhappy with the Biden administration’s approach to immigration and the high number of border crossings.
“I feel sorry for most of the immigrants that came here on the empty promise of open borders and a free lunch in America,” said Kevin Shepherd, executive chair for Senate District 31 Republicans, in the northwest Twin Cities suburbs. “But with all life choices, we have consequences.”
ICE’s presence has mobilized some Minnesotans to document agents’ activities and prompted some school district officials to say they’ll block agents’ access to schools. Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey barred ICE agents from staging their vehicles on city-owned parking lots.