MINNEAPOLIS — Insisting that he was in Minnesota to calm tensions, Vice President JD Vance on Thursday blamed ''far-left people'' and state and local law enforcement officials for the chaos that has unfolded during the White House's aggressive deportation campaign.
The Republican vice president said, ''We're doing everything that we can to lower the temperature,'' adding that Minnesota leaders should ''meet us halfway.''
The Justice Department is investigating top Democrats in the state, including Gov. Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, over whether they have obstructed or impeded immigration enforcement through their public criticism of the administration. Walz and Frey have described the investigation as an attempt to bully the political opposition.
Federal officers stood in a row behind Vance as he spoke, and there were two U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement vehicles emblazoned with the slogan ''Defend the Homeland.''
His visit follows weeks of aggressive rhetoric from the White House, including President Donald Trump, who has threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act — and send in military forces — to crack down on unrest. Asked about that option, Vance said, ''Right now, we don't think that we need that.''
Trump dispatched thousands of federal agents to Minnesota earlier this month after reports of child care fraud by Somali immigrants. Minneapolis-area officials, including Frey, as well as the police, religious leaders and the business community, have pushed back. And outrage grew after an agent fatally shot Renee Good, a U.S. citizen and mother of three, during a confrontation this month.
Walz said the federal government was to blame for the turmoil.
''Take the show of force off the streets and partner with the state on targeted enforcement of violent offenders instead of random, aggressive confrontation,'' he wrote on social media.