One hundred clergy members arrested at Minneapolis airport as anti-ICE protests continue
We’re getting an update that 100 clergy members were arrested while protesting federal immigration enforcement outside Minneapolis-St Paul international airport today. They were arrested by members of the airport staff and local law enforcement, according to organizers.
They added that the faith leaders “prayed together, sang songs and hymns, and shared stories of those who have been abducted by ICE while at work or commuting to and from the airport” in an effort to call on airlines companies – particularly Delta and Signature Aviation – to “stand with Minnesotans in calling for ICE to immediately end its surge in the state”.



Key events
ICE surge continues in Maine with more than 100 arrests, governor demands agents ‘show warrants’
Earlier this week, we brought you the news that the Department of Homeland Security had started a immigration crackdown in Maine, dubbed ‘Operation Catch of the Day’. Speaking to Fox News, Patricia Hyde, deputy assistant director of ICE, said the agency has compiled a list of 1,400 individuals in Maine it intends to target.
In a statement to the Guardian on Friday, DHS assistant secretary Tricia McLaughlin said ICE agents had already arrested “more than 100 illegal aliens” since the operation began. The department said some of those taken into custody are “the worst of the worst” and have been “charged and convicted of horrific crimes,” but cited the same four examples it released earlier in the week.
Immigrant rights groups have been on alert as ICE concentrates its operation on Maine’s two largest cities, Portland and Lewiston. Organizers say agents have been targeting African nationals from Somalia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Angola, many of them asylees who have made the coastal state home in recent decades.
On Wednesday, a local ICE sighting hotline – organized and run by Maine Immigrant Rights Coalition – said they received more than 1,100 calls, a 35% increase in calls from the previous day. Immigrants in Maine only represent about 4% of the state’s total population, most of whom have legal status to live and work in the US, according to a recent report by the Migration Policy Institute.
At a press conference in Portland on Thursday, Janet Mills, the state’s Democratic governor, said the Trump administration has not returned her calls since the operation began. She added that her office has received reports of people with no criminal record being detained and urged homeland security to be transparent in its actions, saying she would be “shocked” if federal law enforcement located 1,400 individuals with criminal backgrounds.
“If they have warrants, show the warrants,” she said. “We don’t believe in secret arrests or secret police.”
Mills also described widespread fear in schools, workplaces, and businesses that are losing employees who have either been detained or are not showing up, despite living in the state legally.
Earlier this week, a video by 28-year-old Crisitan Vaca – an Ecuadoran immigrant living in Maine with valid immigration status – went viral online. In the footage, federal agents appear outside Vaca’s home in Biddeford, 18 miles south of Portland, where he lives with his wife and young son. In an interview with the Associated Press in Spanish through a translator, Vaca said that he approached the officers when they were taking pictures outside his house.
When Vaca refused to go outside, the video shows one of the agents telling him that they will “come back for your whole family” through Vaca’s screen door.
“I have been in this country since September 2023,” Vaca, who works as a roofer, told the AP. “I have immigration status … the judge postponed my court date to another day. Now I have a new court date. I have my work permit. I have my social security number [sic].”
Local authorities also decried the scope of the federal immigration dragnet this week. Cumberland County sheriff Kevin Joyce said that on Wednesday evening one of his corrections officer recruits was arrested by ICE agents. “This is an individual that had permission to be working in the state of Maine. We vetted him,” the sheriff said of the unnamed recruit. Joyce was one of more than 100 national sheriffs who met with Trump’s border czar Tom Homan last year. “The book in the movie do not line up,” Joyce told reporters on Thursday. “We’re being told one story, which is totally different than what’s occurring.”
According to the Immigrant Legal Advocacy Project (ILAP), Maine’s only statewide immigration legal services organization, they have received several fearful calls as the crackdown continues. This includes a pregnant woman who reached out to ILAP because she was “terrified to leave her home to go to a medical appointment”. Another person called and said someone had “pulled the fire alarm in her building, desperately trying to save people from ICE”. ILAP said that they received reports of teachers escorting immigrant children home from school who had agents follow them and push their way into an apartment building lobby.
“It is clear the overall operation is anything but targeted,” said Sue Roche, ILAP’s executive director. “People are being racially profiled on the streets and in their cars. As is their playbook, ICE is doing everything they can to inflict maximum cruelty and chaos.”
ILAP also noted that they’re seeing arrested people transferred out of the state to detention facilities in New England. DHS did not respond to Guardian’s request for comment about where detainees are being held since Maine does not have a dedicated immigration detention facility.
In Lewiston, it’s “hard to overstate the level of fear within the community” according to Democratic congressional candidate Jordan Wood, who is running to replace outgoing US representative Jared Golden. “I have heard that as many as 20% of students at certain schools did not show up,” Wood, who was born, raised and lives in the area, told the Guardian.
He added that the community response to the ICE surge – from ensuring immigrants know their rights to sharing where agents have been spotted – has been hugely encouraging. “It’s important to just know the community that that they’re coming after won’t stand idly by while our neighbors are terrorized,” Wood said.
At her press conference in Portland, Mills still wanted more information about the decision to target the Pine Tree State. “Why Maine? Why now? What were the orders that came from above? Who’s giving the orders?,” she said, adding that state officials have reached out to the Trump administration but still “have no answers”.
One hundred clergy members arrested at Minneapolis airport as anti-ICE protests continue
We’re getting an update that 100 clergy members were arrested while protesting federal immigration enforcement outside Minneapolis-St Paul international airport today. They were arrested by members of the airport staff and local law enforcement, according to organizers.
They added that the faith leaders “prayed together, sang songs and hymns, and shared stories of those who have been abducted by ICE while at work or commuting to and from the airport” in an effort to call on airlines companies – particularly Delta and Signature Aviation – to “stand with Minnesotans in calling for ICE to immediately end its surge in the state”.
‘You have an ally in the White House,’ Vance tells anti-abortion protesters

Carter Sherman
Reporting from the March for Life
Thousands of anti-abortion activists poured on to the National Mall for the largest annual anti-abortion gathering in the US.
“You have an ally in the White House,” Vice-President JD Vance told the marchers in his speech.
Vance rattled off a number of anti-abortion policies enacted by Trump administration, including its decision to pardon people who were convicted for blockading clinics, banning the use of fetal tissue from abortions in some government research and expanding the so-called Mexico City policy, which bans groups from receiving foreign aid if they provide abortions or promote the right to the procedure overseas.
While anti-abortion activists applauded those actions, they have grown increasingly disenchanted with the Trump administration over the last year. Abortion foes had hoped the administration would enforce the Comstock Act, a 19th-century law that, if enforced, could result in a de facto nationwide abortion ban. They had also hoped that the administration would move to curtail access to abortion pills, which have become a major avenue of abortion access in the years since the US supreme court overturned Roe v Wade.
However, the administration has not taken meaningful action on either issue. Trump has also repeatedly backed away from opposing abortion rights. Most Americans support some degree of access to the procedure.
“I must address an elephant in the room,” Vance said. “A fear that some of you have that not enough progress has been made, that not enough has happened in the political arena, that we’re not going far enough, that our politics has failed to answer the clarion call to life that this march represents.”
He added: “I hear you, and I understand.”
Vance also celebrated his wife Usha’s new pregnancy, suggesting that he had talked her into it.
“Let the record show: You have a vice-president who practices what he preaches,” he said. “Usha and I announced this week that we are expecting our fourth and it will be our third baby boy, so we’ll take whatever prayers you can give.”
Anti-abortion demonstrators take part in March for Life in DC
We’re getting a number of pictures from the national March for Life in DC. Despite the district preparing for severe winter weather, thousands of anti-abortion demonstrators gathered in the district. Earlier, Vice-President JD Vance addressed the crowds.
CNN has spoken to the Columbia Heights, Minnesota, school district superintendent Zena Stenvik about ICE’s detention of four students in the city, including five-year-old Liam Ramos.
A reminder that Liam was taken into custody on Tuesday as he and his father arrived home from preschool in the Minneapolis suburb. According to school officials, an ICE agent used the child to knock on the family’s front door to determine if anyone else was inside, before detaining father and son. They were later transported to Texas.
Stevnik described arriving to the scene to people crying in the street who told her the child had been taken. The father’s car was also still running, she told CNN, contradicting claims from homeland security that he had attempted to flee on foot and abandoned Liam. Stevnik also said that another adult at the home had pleaded to take care of Liam but was denied.
Vice-president JD Vance has defended ICE’s detainment of Liam, claiming the child would’ve been left to “freeze to death” if he wasn’t taken with his dad. Asked if the child would’ve been abandoned and left outside, Stevnik said, “Not a chance.” She told CNN she spoke to Liam’s mother, the school board chair and neighbors close to the family, all of whom wanted to take him.
I entered the home and the mother was distraught. She wanted Liam, she wanted to open the door. And I can’t even imagine as a mother myself how conflicted she must have been. This is what she told me, seeing her husband standing in the driveway in handcuffs saying, don’t open the door and also hearing her little one.
And she could see the ICE agent standing there at the door. So, I – I just can’t imagine as a mother what she was going through. It was heartbreaking for me to hear her. And she looked up at me and – and said, I don’t understand what’s happening. We’re not criminals. And as our – as the family’s attorney stated yesterday, they have followed everything that they’ve needed to do in terms of the legal processes.
Stevnik went on:
Here in the Twin Cities right now, it’s pretty common that people are not opening their doors because once anyone cracks open their door, the ICE agents are bursting through or even breaking doors down. So, that’s the behavior that we’re seeing. So, that’s the only behavior that we can assume would have happened.
Marc Prokosch, an attorney representing the family, has said the Ramos family had followed proper legal procedures. They have an active asylum case and entered the US at an official port of entry, he said.
The family did everything they were supposed to in accordance with how the rules have been set out. They did not come here illegally. They are not criminals.
More on this story here:
FBI director Kash Patel has conducted another purge of field office leaders and senior agents linked to the two criminal investigations of Donald Trump, MS NOW reports citing multiple people briefed on the matter.
While the exact number ousted is unclear, two people familiar with the matter told MS NOW that the special agent in charge in Atlanta has been removed, as has the acting assistant director in charge of the New York field office and a former special agent in charge in New Orleans.
What is more, two people said that as many as six agents in Miami were forced out over their connection to the FBI search of Mar-a-Lago, and other agents pushed out were involved in the “Arctic Frost” investigation of Trump’s effort to overturn the 2020 election.
Peace plan talks between Russia, Ukraine and the United States have begun in Abu Dhabi, according to UAE
Aneesa Ahmed
Talks between Russia, Ukraine and the United States have begun in Abu Dhabi, according to the United Arab Emirates’ ministry of foreign affairs.
The UAE is hosting a rare set of trilateral talks, bringing together negotiators from Russia, Ukraine, and the US. The talks have started today, and are scheduled to continue over the next two days.
According to a press statement, the UAE hopes that these discussions would “contribute to tangible steps toward ending a crisis that has persisted for nearly four years and resulted in immense humanitarian suffering”.
A reminder that special envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, also Donald Trump’s son-in-law, are representing the US.
New poll finds majority of likely voters disapprove of Trump’s performance in office
A new poll from Emerson College finds that 51% of likely voters disapprove of Donald Trump’s performance in office, one year into his new administration.
Also included in this latest survey, 57% of voters think the presence of federal immigration agents in communities has been more harmful than beneficial, while 38% think it has been more beneficial than harmful.
Linked to this, only 38% of respondents had a favorable opinion of Department of Homeland Security secretary Kristi Noem, while 45% had an unfavorable opinion.

David Smith
Senator Elizabeth Warren and fellow Democrats have accused Donald Trump of letting white-collar criminals “off the hook” by diverting crucial resources to his sweeping immigration crackdown.
In a letter to federal watchdogs, the Democrats demand an investigation into the US president for shifting more than 25,000 personnel away from investigating fraud, tax evasion and money laundering in favour of his immigration enforcement agenda.
“The Trump Administration is letting white-collar criminals off the hook for all kinds of wrongdoing,” Warren, from Massachusetts, said in a statement. “Instead of protecting American families from fraud and predatory behavior, the Administration is diverting resources to pursue its inhumane immigration agenda.
“Nobody is above the law, and the Trump Administration needs to stop treating white collar criminals with kid gloves.”
In the letter to inspectors general of the justice department, state department, homeland security, the postal service and the treasury’s tax division, the Democrats allege that the administration is “diverting critical federal law enforcement personnel and resources” away from corporate crime and into what they describe as Trump’s “civil immigration dragnet”.
The letter – signed by Democrats including Warren, Senator Richard Blumenthal and Representatives Dan Goldman, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Madeleine Dean – demands a formal evaluation of the extent of the transfers and their impact on US financial crime enforcement.
It cites a “deep concern” that entire investigative units have been “gutted” as agents are sent to bolster Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations.
The president also made sure to tout his achievements at the World Economic Forum in Davos this week. “So many things accomplished,” he wrote in a post on Truth Social, “including the framework of a deal with NATO on Greenland. Also, the BOARD OF PEACE. WOW!!! MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!”
A reminder that the neither Trump, nor Nato chief Mark Rutte, have provided explicit details on the Greenland deal. Earlier in the week, the president said it would last “forever” while speaking to reporters in Davos.
Trump casts doubt on reality of global warming in face of upcoming snowstorms
Ahead of the snowstorms expected on the US east coast this weekend, the president took to Truth Social to posit how global warming could still exist in the face of adverse weather conditions like these.
“Record Cold Wave expected to hit 40 States. Rarely seen anything like it before,” he wrote. “Could the Environmental Insurrectionists please explain – WHATEVER HAPPENED TO GLOBAL WARMING???”
Of course, global warming does not stop winter … but in fact causes average global temperatures to rise. Increased temperatures also intensify snowstorms, and a rapidly warming Arctic has ultimately stretched the polar vortex – meaning the US is facing the brunt of colder weather over the coming days.
My colleagues Oliver Laughland and Tom Silverstone have spent time in Minnesota, following the fatal shooting of Renee Good.
In their latest piece, they travelled to neighbourhoods in Minneapolis, grappling with a surge of federal immigration enforcement, to speak with residents who are fighting to defend their communities from violence and intimidation. They also embed with ICE watch groups, hear from Somali American residents, and witness a swarm of federal agents conduct a sweep in the suburbs.
Watch here:
Donald Trump doesn’t have any public events today, according to the White House schedule.
He’s due to sit for a print interview later today, and meet with Frank Bisignano, the commissioner of the Social Security Administration.
We will, however, hear from the vice-president, JD Vance, who will speak at this year’s March for Life in Washington. A reminder that this is the country’s largest anti-abortion rally. The Republican House speaker, Mike Johnson, is also set to address demonstrators.
We’ll bring you the latest lines as that gets under way at 11am ET.
UN rights chief slams ‘routine abuse’ of migrants in US
The United Nations rights chief voiced astonishment on Friday at the “now-routine abuse” of migrants by US authorities, urging Washington to end practices “tearing apart families”.
Volker Turk called on the United States to ensure migration policies and enforcement practices respect human dignity and due process and slammed the “dehumanising portrayal and harmful treatment of migrants and refugees”.
“I am astounded by the now-routine abuse and denigration of migrants and refugees,” he said in a statement.
“Where is the concern for their dignity, and our common humanity?”
Thousands of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents have been deployed to Democratic-led Minneapolis, as the Republican administration of Donald Trump presses its campaign to deport what it says are millions of illegal immigrants across the country.
Michael Sainato
A “no work, no school, no shopping” blackout day of protest was kicked off by community leaders, faith leaders and labor unions on Friday in protest against the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) surge in the state.
The Day of Truth & Freedom protest comes in the wake of the killing of Renee Good, the unarmed woman killed by a federal immigration officer in Minneapolis earlier this month.
Their demands include that ICE leave Minnesota, that the ICE officer who killed Good be legally held accountable, an end to additional federal funding for ICE, and for the agency to be investigated for human rights and constitutional violations.
Dozens of local businesses in Minnesota have announced closures in solidarity. The Minneapolis city council endorsed the day of action and the general strike. The day of action culminates with a march in downtown Minneapolis at 2pm local time.
“We are going to be having dangerously cold weather on Friday – -10F with wind chills. Like the high is going to be -10F with wind chills of up to -20F,” Chelsie Glaubitz Gabiou, president of the Minnesota Regional Labor Federation, AFL-CIO, told the Guardian.
“We are a northern state, and we are built for the cold, and we are going to show up, but folks are going to need to pay attention to not just the march, but what people are doing, the individual stories of solidarity that people are going to be doing.”
The Minnesota AFL-CIO, the state’s federation of more than 1,000 affiliated local unions, has endorsed the day of action, along with dozens of local labor unions.
Minnesota gears up for anti-immigration enforcement protests on Friday
Hello and welcome to the US politics live blog. My name is Tom Ambrose and I will be bringing you the latest news lines.
We start with news that a vast network of labor unions, progressive organizations and clergy has been urging Minnesotans to stay away from work, school and stores on Friday to protest against immigration enforcement in the state.
“We really, really want ICE to leave Minnesota, and they’re not going to leave Minnesota unless there’s a ton of pressure on them,” said Kate Havelin of Indivisible Twin Cities, one of the more than 100 groups that are mobilizing. “They shouldn’t be roaming any streets in our country just the way they are now.”
The Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St Paul have seen daily protests since Renee Good was fatally shot by a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer during an operation on 7 January, AP reports.
The Service Employees International Union (SEIU), which represents nearly 2 million service and healthcare workers across the US, is leading calls for nationwide participation.
“Martin Luther King wrote to Cesar Chavez during the Great Boycott and said our separate struggles are really one struggle,” David Huerta, president of SEIU-United Service Workers West (USWW) and SEIU California, said on Sunday on Politics Nation with the Rev Al Sharpton on MS Now.
“Right now, more than any time ever, we see our civil rights, workers’ rights, and immigrants’ rights … in alignment with one another.”
He added: “When we look at Minneapolis – the violence, the cruelty that’s being brought by this federal government against working people – it is now more than ever that we have to stand together, regardless of our differences.”
Friday’s mobilization was planned as the largest coordinated protest action to date, including a march in downtown Minneapolis despite dangerously cold temperatures that the National Weather Service forecast in the single to double digits below zero (-20 to -30C).
In other developments:
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Donald Trump withdrew on Thursday an invitation for Canada to join his “board of peace” initiative aimed at resolving global conflicts. “Please let this Letter serve to represent that the Board of Peace is withdrawing its invitation to you regarding Canada’s joining, what will be, the most prestigious Board of Leaders ever assembled, at any time,” Trump wrote in a Truth Social post directed at the Canadian prime minister, Mark Carney.
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Greenland has demanded its red lines on sovereignty be respected after Donald Trump claimed an agreement with Nato would give the US full and permanent access to the Arctic island, the object of an increasingly bitter months-long dispute. Jens-Frederik Nielsen, Greenland’s prime minister, said on Thursday he did not know what was in the deal but the largely self-governing territory wanted a “peaceful dialogue” with the US, and its sovereignty was non-negotiable.
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Before the US military snatched Venezuela’s president, Nicolás Maduro, earlier this month, Delcy Rodríguez and her powerful brother pledged to cooperate with the Trump administration once the strongman was gone, four sources involved at high levels with the discussions told the Guardian. Rodríguez, who was sworn in on 5 January as acting president to replace Maduro, and her brother Jorge, the head of the national assembly, secretly assured US and Qatari officials through intermediaries ahead of time that they would welcome Maduro’s departure, according to the sources.
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The White House posted a digitally altered image of a woman who was arrested on Thursday in a case touted by the US attorney general, Pam Bondi, to make it seem as if she was dramatically crying, a Guardian analysis of the image has found. The woman, Nekima Levy Armstrong, also appears to have darker skin in the altered image. Armstrong was one of three people arrested on Thursday in connection to a demonstration that disrupted church services in St Paul, Minnesota, on Sunday.
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Jack Smith, the former special counsel, has defended his decision to seek criminal charges against Donald Trump for his efforts to overturn the 2020 election in his first and perhaps only public appearance to discuss the cases after they were dropped last year. “No one should be above the law in this country, and the law required that he be held to account,” Smith said in his opening remarks before the House judiciary committee. “So that is what I did.”
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The Trump administration will block organizations that receive US foreign aid from subsidizing diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives and what the administration calls “gender ideology”. The new policy will affect about $30bn in foreign assistance.
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