More ICE Protests Held in Chicago
- Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson encouraged residents to oppose federal immigration laws during the weekend protests, stating, 'I am counting on all of Chicago to resist in this moment because, whatever particular vulnerable group is being targeted today, another group will be next.'
- Thousands protested in Chicago on June 11, resulting in 17 arrests and a hospitalization after a car drove through the crowd.
- Danielle Carter criticized the protests as a manufactured crisis, blaming the Democratic Party and Johnson for unrest.
16 Articles
16 Articles

Following ICE subpoena, Chicago city clerk suspending online municipal ID program portal
The Chicago city clerk is suspending the online application portal to a municipal ID program recently subpoenaed by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the latest defense from local officials grappling with the threat of mass deportations under Republican President Donald Trump. Clerk Anna Valencia announced Friday that her office would take the CityKey online portal offline Friday night, a week after the Tribune reported that ICE subpoena…
Brandon Johnson Urges Chicagoans to 'Rise Up' Against ICE
Chicago's radical Democrat Mayor Brandon Johnson is urging his residents to "rise up" and take to the streets to oppose ICE. The post Mayor Brandon Johnson Urges Chicagoans to ‘Rise Up’ Against ICE appeared first on Breitbart.
Chicago Flips Red’s Carter on anti-ICE protests: ‘This was not peaceful at all’
Danielle Carter stood on the front lines of Tuesday night’s unrest in downtown Chicago as a counter-protestor. The co-founder and Vice President of Flip Chicago Red, a conservative grassroots movement aiming to shift political control of the city, delivered one message: the chaos erupting across the city is not grassroots activism—it’s a manufactured crisis.“They were saying, ‘F Trump,’ they had scarves, masks, sunglasses—only thing you saw was …
Hundreds gather for anti-ICE rally Thursday in Chicago, shutting down access to parts of downtown – Chicago Sun-Times
A few dozen police officers on bicycles followed alongside protesters as they marched through the streets, and city vehicles blocked access to most bridges across the Chicago River from the Loop to River North. There were also rolling closures on Michigan Avenue in both directions between Randolph and Ontario streets.
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