Minnesota residents plan general strike Friday to protest ICE

MINNEAPOLIS — Businesses planned to close, union members to skip work and residents to forgo shopping in favor of marching downtown here on Friday, aiming to mount a significant economic protest against the Trump administration’s deployment of federal agents in Minnesota.

Organizers of the action, dubbed ICE Out of Minnesota: Day of Truth and Freedom, have called for residents to boycott work, school and shopping. Faith leaders, labor unions and business leaders have joined to promote the general strike, which calls for an immediate stop to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement actions in the state, charges for the ICE officer who killed Renée Good and no additional funding for the agency from Congress in the next federal budget.

They are aiming for a statewide pause in “daily economic activity” to call attention to the tactics of federal agents and “show Minnesota’s moral heart and collective economic power,” organizers wrote online. A march is planned for 2 p.m. in Minneapolis.

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Thousands of Minnesota residents, including many who do not normally identify as activists, have protested the federal government’s actions in the weeks since the Department of Homeland Security sent agents into the Twin Cities area with the stated mission of removing undocumented immigrants.

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Court challenges to the Trump administration’s actions are now before federal judges. The state of Minnesota and the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul have sued to stop ICE’s deployment in the state, and civil liberties groups are representing Minnesota residents who say federal agents have violated their constitutional rights. A federal judge in one of the citizen suits last week barred DHS agents from arresting peaceful protesters, but this week an appeals court temporarily lifted that restriction while the litigation continues.

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The high in Minneapolis on Friday was forecast to be minus-10 degrees. The National Weather Service issued an extreme cold warning for Thursday evening until noon Friday, saying wind chills as low as minus-45 degrees were expected.