Usa new news

With Trump deportation raids reported to start in Chicago, advocates say they will safeguard immigrants

Illinois officials from all levels of government Saturday urged calm amid reports of Chicago being the target of sweeping immigration raids ordered by the Trump administration beginning early Tuesday morning.

Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia, D-Ill., said Saturday at a news conference held by immigration rights advocates in Pilsen that “the current threats are nothing new” and advocates are ready to fight for and protect the community.

“We are here today because we will be tested once again,” Garcia said. “However, we do have experience in defending and protecting our community.”

Citing sources, the Wall Street Journal reported Friday the incoming Trump administration is planning a large-scale immigration raid in Chicago starting Tuesday, a day after Trump is inaugurated, and will last all week.

Incoming border czar Tom Homan told Fox News Friday, “there’s going to be a big raid across the country. Chicago is just one of many places.” In December, Homan declared Trump’s mass deportation plan would start right here.

In an interview with NBC News’ “Meet the Press” moderator Kristen Welker on Saturday, Trump didn’t give specify when and where mass deportation raids would start, only that it will happen soon.

“It’ll begin very early, very quickly,” he said, adding: “I can’t say which cities because things are evolving. And I don’t think we want to say what city. You’ll see it firsthand.”

“We have to get the criminals out of our country. And I think you would agree with that. I don’t know how anyone could not agree.”

Reps. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia and Delia Ramirez look on during a news conference Saturday in Pilsen. Both emphasized that advocates were ready to protect immigrants ahead of reported mass deportation raids starting next week.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

At the news conference, Garcia pushed back on that claim, saying, “We continue to reject the assertion by Donald Trump and other enablers that somehow we are more prone to criminality. It is a falsehood.”

The Trump administration’s threats have many in Chicago fearing the worst. Veronica Cisneros came to Chicago from Mexico 24 years ago, and now feels she has to prove she and her family are worthy to be in the country despite having contributed for nearly a quarter century.

“I’ve worked, I’ve paid my taxes, so I don’t have any sort of problems, but I have fear for my family and myself,” Cisneros told the Sun-Times Saturday morning. “We have to fight now to prove we are good people.”

Rep. Delia Ramirez — a member of the House committee on Homeland Security committee who is the daughter of Guatemalan immigrants and married to a DACA recipient — warned against fear, which is being used as a tactic.

“What anti-immigrant rhetoric and people all over this country want to do in this moment is to divide us, and to all of us in Chicago, let’s choose love over hate. Let’s choose unity over division,” Ramirez said.

Ald. Jesse Fuentes (26th) urged calm and reminded attendees that people can still go about their daily lives with the protections in Chicago. Current ICE policies consider schools safe spaces, and officials said there’s no reason to believe that policy would change as of Saturday.

“We want families to understand young people can still go to school, our classrooms are going to be safe,” Fuentes said. “Individuals can go to work and that they can dial 911 and not be afraid because the Chicago Police Department will not be working with ICE. … No agency or sister agency of the city of Chicago will coordinate or work with ICE agents.”

The city has been working for months on various scenarios for what would happen when Trump took office, including running “tabletop exercises” dealing with the city’s response, city officials told the Sun-Times.

Beatriz Ponce de Leon, Chicago’s deputy mayor for Immigrant, Migrant and Refugee Rights, said the news that immigration raids could start in Chicago Tuesday “wasn’t a surprise,” but that “hearing confirmation made it more real, more concrete.”

She said the city is prepared. In addition to community agencies holding “know your rights” events all over the city, Chicago has met with city departments and sister agencies, such as the police and public school district, to make sure they know what they should, and should not, do.

Garien Gatewood, Chicago’s deputy mayor of community safety, said the police department has been working under a welcoming city ordinance for 40 years and so police are well aware of what they should do.

Chicago’s police department does not document immigration status, nor share information with federal immigration authorities, said spokesman Don Terry in a statement. But he added that police “will not intervene or interfere with any other government agencies performing their duties.”

Ald. Leni Manaa-Hoppenworth (48th) holds a sign that reads, “Know Your Rights” as Rep. Delia Ramirez, D-Ill, looks on during a news conference Saturday in Pilsen, where advocates and elected officials discussed how undocumented immigrants can protect themselves from deportation ahead of the incoming Trump administration.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

“From the top down, everybody at CPD understands the roles that they play,” he said. “This is not the first time that they’ve had interactions with federal agents acting about immigration status.”

If someone sees a police officer or a sister agency violating the Welcoming Cities act, they can report it to the Civilian Office of Police Accountability or COPA or the department of law. Gatewood said that with a situation as “intense” as this, violations would potentially be dealt with by the superintendent.

Cisneros, an immigrant parent advocate at the Resurrection Project, a Pilsen-based advocacy group, helps a group of about 10 mothers who are undocumented. She said they’re fearful of what they expect to come Monday — a fear she feels herself — but has tried to prepare them as best she can.

“They’re afraid of what’s to come,” Cisneros said. “I try to be strong for them. Everyone in the community wants a good Chicago. I’ve fallen in love with Chicago since the first day I came to this country. … I try to keep safe and save my family.”

Chicago has been a sanctuary city for nearly 40 years since Mayor Harold Washington issued an executive order, allowing undocumented people to access city services and live without fear of police harassment or city cooperation with federal immigration authorities. The policy led to what is known as the “welcoming city” ordinance.

In August 2022, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott started sending asylum-seekers from cities along the U.S.-Mexico border to sanctuary cities led by Democrats, like Chicago.

Tom Homan, President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for “border czar,” speaks at a Law & Order PAC event in December. He warned Mayor Brandon Johnson, who has said he would protect the city’s immigrants from federal agents, “If he doesn’t want to help, get the hell out of the way.”

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times file

Speaking on Fox News, Homan said “ICE is finally going to go out and do their job. We’re going to take the handcuffs off ICE and let them go arrest criminal aliens, that’s what’s going to happen.”

In December at a Northwest Side GOP holiday party, Homan said “Chicago’s in trouble,” calling Mayor Brandon Johnson and Gov. JB Pritzker “terrible” and to “come to the table” to negotiate with him over a mass deportation plan. He warned Johnson, who has said he would protect the city’s immigrants from federal agents, “If he doesn’t want to help, get the hell out of the way.”

Pritzker’s office did not provide a response to the news that immigration raids were going to start in Chicago next week. The office provided a transcript of the governor’s statement at a Dec. 11 press conference where he said he “believes it is his obligation to protect” undocumented immigrants who have not committed violent crimes.

The City Council on Wednesday voted 39-11 to table an attempt by two Hispanic alderpersons to restore the exceptions to the city’s Welcoming City ordinance, which means Trump will have no help from Chicago police officers when and if he follows through on his threat of mass deportations of illegal immigrants, starting with those with records.

In McHenry County, a Republican stronghold, officials with the sheriff’s office have pushed for state officials to rewrite state laws that bar them from working with federal immigration officials. While there hasn’t been movement on that legislation, some fear law enforcement officials may decide to go against state law as was threatened by some sheriffs with the state’s contentious assault rifle ban.

Fuentes said state officials will be on the watch for that and hold anyone who violates state law accountable.

“The state is very clear that the Trust Act doesn’t allow for local elected officials to work with ICE,” Fuentes told the Sun-Times. “Our state elected officials are ensuring we are holding local police district officials accountable for that.”

Resurrection Project officials urged people to call 855-435-7693, their family support hotline, if an arrest is made.

Contributing: Tina Sfondeles

Immigration advocates hold signs that read, “Renew your DACA,” and “Know your rights” during a news conference Saturday in Pilsen.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

Exit mobile version