Minneapolis Mayor Denounces Military Aid to ICE as Unconstitutional

TL;DR Summary
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey called the idea of sending active‑duty soldiers to Minnesota to aid an ICE crackdown “completely unconstitutional,” urging peaceful protests as DHS ramps up immigration enforcement in the Twin Cities; federal troops could be deployed under the Insurrection Act, with roughly 1,500 soldiers on standby and the Minnesota National Guard mobilized by Gov. Walz, though no deployment has occurred, while some hotels housing ICE personnel have temporarily closed and a federal judge limited detention or tear gas of peaceful protesters.
- Sending soldiers to Minneapolis for ICE crackdown would be "completely unconstitutional," Mayor Frey says CBS News
- President Trump preparing 1,500 troops for mobilization to Minnesota amid anti-ICE protests FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul
- Sending soldiers to Minneapolis for immigration crackdown would be unconstitutional, mayor says 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS
- Frey on reported soldiers on standby: ‘Clearly designed to intimidate’ The Hill
- Trump orders active duty troops to prepare for Minnesota deployment Politico
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