Anti-ICE activists picketing a hotel in Minnesota's Twin Cities, holding signs like 'Bring the Heat! Melt the ICE!' amid snowy winter conditions.
Anti-ICE activists picketing a hotel in Minnesota's Twin Cities, holding signs like 'Bring the Heat! Melt the ICE!' amid snowy winter conditions.
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Activists plan weeklong anti-ICE protests in Twin Cities, including hotel pickets and school-focused trainings

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Organizers in Minnesota’s Twin Cities region planned a series of demonstrations and trainings from Feb. 25 through March 1 under the banner “Bring the Heat! Melt the ICE!”, including actions at the Minnesota State Capitol and at hotels they say are housing federal immigration agents, according to organizing materials obtained by the advocacy group Defending Education and reported by The Daily Wire.

Organizers described the planned actions as part of a long-running local campaign opposing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). A “welcome packet” for participants said: “For months now, the Twin Cities have been at the forefront of a struggle against ICE in this country… there’s a long journey ahead of us on the road to abolishing ICE, and we’re just getting started.”

According to the same materials, organizers listed demands that include removing ICE from Minnesota; releasing detained people described as “our abducted neighbors”; closing facilities they called “detention camps”; a statewide eviction moratorium; dropping charges against protesters accused of confronting ICE officers; amnesty for undocumented immigrants; and abolishing ICE, the Department of Homeland Security, and prisons.

The organizing push followed public statements by White House border official Tom Homan about reducing the federal enforcement footprint in Minnesota after what he described as increased cooperation from local law enforcement. Reporting by The Washington Post said Homan indicated federal operations would return to an “original footprint,” with a smaller security force remaining temporarily. A separate report published via Yahoo News, citing Fox News coverage of a Feb. 4, 2026 press conference in Minneapolis, quoted Homan as saying a drawdown of about 700 personnel would take effect immediately.

Protest plans included decentralized actions at hotels named in a spreadsheet obtained by Defending Education. A calendar shared in those documents instructed participants: “Grab some friends, noisemakers, and head to a hotel that houses ICE on this list… these are autonomous and decentralized.” The same Daily Wire report said the hotel protests were being organized in part by the Sunrise Movement.

The calendar also listed multiple actions at the Minnesota State Capitol on Thursday and Friday, including what it described as a student walkout and sit-in organized by “Twin Cities student organizers.” Organizers also advised participants against documenting illegal activity, writing: “In the event that somebody around you is engaging in illegal activity, do not take photos or videos of that, unless it is to record an interaction with law enforcement. Don’t write in incriminating ways about illegal activity you observe or participate in.”

Another element promoted in the calendar was “school patrols” intended to monitor areas near schools for immigration enforcement activity. The calendar claimed that in Minneapolis “ICE incidents occurred at or within two blocks of public schools every single day for 6 weeks straight,” and said organizers responded by running “about 3000 patrol shifts per week.” Those figures were not independently verified in the materials reviewed.

Trainings listed in the calendar included a session at Hennepin Avenue United Methodist Church on creating “sanctuary schools,” described as being hosted by Take Action MN, and another at First Universalist Church described as being hosted by the Minnesota Federation of Educators on organizing schools as “bases of the working class.” The calendar described “sanctuary school teams” as groups of educators and caregivers who provide protective presence, rapid response, and mutual aid while organizing around longer-term policy demands.

The Daily Wire report also listed participating groups as including Spring House Ministries, Red Pine Revolutionary Collective, Twin Cities Democratic Socialists of America, and Indigenous Roots. It reported that organizers planned to provide free food through a group called Seeds of Peace, arrange lodging in private homes, and raise money via ActBlue for food, training, and accommodations.

The welcome packet included the slogan “Eat First. Then Smash the State,” and said Muslims observing Ramadan would be prioritized for dinner meals, according to The Daily Wire’s account of the documents. Practical guidance in the packet encouraged use of the encrypted messaging app Signal, asking people their pronouns, and supporting Mexican restaurants in Minneapolis and St. Paul; it also warned that “right-wing influencers and government agents” had infiltrated local “rapid response systems,” the document said.

The calendar and welcome packet also encouraged visits to sites connected to George Floyd’s 2020 killing and to the location where Renée Nicole Good was fatally shot during a January 2026 immigration enforcement operation. In the materials cited by The Daily Wire, organizers wrote: “As resistance grows, so does our collective grief about those we have loved and lost in the struggle for liberation… please do so with respect and reverence.”

Good’s death has been the subject of national coverage and competing accounts. Federal officials, including Department of Homeland Security leadership, said the ICE agent involved acted in self-defense after Good used her vehicle as a weapon, while witnesses and video analyses reported by major outlets have disputed key aspects of that characterization.

Erika Sanzi, a senior communications official at Defending Education, criticized the involvement of educator- and student-linked groups in the organizing effort, telling The Daily Wire that “groups of radicals and revolutionaries” were becoming embedded in K–12 institutions through unions and training programs, and calling the protests “highly coordinated by outside actors.”

Watu wanasema nini

X discussions on the 'Bring the Heat! Melt the ICE!' weeklong anti-ICE protests in Minnesota's Twin Cities include activists promoting trainings, hotel pickets, and demonstrations through March 1. Conservative accounts criticize the coordinated targeting of ICE agents' hotels and school patrols as non-spontaneous activism. Local reporters cover ongoing actions and expected large crowds at the State Capitol.

Makala yanayohusiana

Crowded ICE Watch recruitment training in Minneapolis amid protests over Renee Good's shooting by ICE agent.
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ICE Watch groups intensify recruitment amid Renee Good shooting protests

Imeripotiwa na AI Picha iliyoundwa na AI

In the aftermath of activist Renee Good's fatal shooting by an ICE agent in Minneapolis on January 7, ICE Watch groups are ramping up recruitment and trainings as nationwide protests demand accountability. Sessions have filled to capacity amid clashes, with officials warning against obstructing enforcement.

In response to federal immigration enforcement operations, activists in Minneapolis have set up makeshift roadblocks to monitor and restrict access to their communities. The actions follow the fatal shooting of anti-ICE protester Alex Pretti and have prompted a partial drawdown of federal agents. Local leaders and protesters cite public safety concerns, while federal officials emphasize cooperation with jails to target criminal immigrants.

Imeripotiwa na AI

President Donald Trump has threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act to deploy troops in Minneapolis, following deadly clashes between federal immigration agents and protesters. The escalation stems from a fatal shooting of a local woman by an ICE agent last week, sparking widespread unrest in the Twin Cities. Community organizers and Democratic leaders are resisting the surge of federal agents, while the administration defends its operations as necessary for public safety.

Vice President JD Vance is scheduled to travel to Minneapolis on Thursday to meet with ICE agents and local leaders, reinforcing federal support amid rising violence against immigration officials. The visit comes as protests escalate, including a church disruption in St. Paul and federal subpoenas to Minnesota officials following the fatal shooting of Renee Good by an ICE agent. White House officials describe Minnesota as 'ground zero' for anti-ICE activities.

Imeripotiwa na AI

An Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent fatally shot Renee Nicole Good, a 37-year-old U.S. citizen and activist, on January 7, 2026, in Minneapolis after she struck him with her vehicle during a confrontation. The incident has sparked widespread protests against ICE operations and led to resignations among Justice Department lawyers. Federal officials describe the shooting as self-defense, while local leaders condemn it as excessive force.

Building on initial reports, protests have intensified and Minnesota's governor has readied the National Guard following the January 7 fatal shooting of 37-year-old mother Renee Nicole Good by an ICE agent in south Minneapolis. Video shows agents firing multiple shots at close range as Good drove away during an enforcement operation, prompting conflicting self-defense claims amid calls for ICE to leave the city.

Imeripotiwa na AI

President Donald Trump has acknowledged that his administration's mass deportation efforts may require a gentler approach following the fatal shootings of two anti-ICE activists in Minneapolis. The incidents, involving federal immigration agents killing Renee Good and Alex Pretti, prompted a leadership change and a reduction in agent presence in the area. Officials are now emphasizing targeted arrests amid heightened protests and calls for reform.

 

 

 

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