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TOLEDO, Ohio — During a visit to Minnesota on Thursday, Vice President JD Vance attributed the ongoing disruptions linked to the White House’s deportation initiative to what he described as the actions of the “far left.” His remarks came ahead of a significant event in Minnesota, which has become a central stage in the national debate over the Trump administration’s immigration policies.
Speaking in Toledo, Ohio, before his trip to Minnesota, Vance stated, “If you want to reduce the chaos in Minneapolis, stop resisting immigration enforcement and acknowledge the necessity of having secure borders in our country. It’s quite straightforward.”
Vance’s itinerary includes a meeting with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents in Minneapolis, a city currently embroiled in protests after an ICE agent fatally shot Renee Good, a mother of three, during a recent confrontation. The vice president, a Republican, has been a vocal supporter of the agent involved, asserting that Good’s death was “tragically self-inflicted.”
In addition, Vance commended the arrests of demonstrators who disrupted a church service in Minnesota on Sunday. The protesters had entered the church, chanting slogans such as “ICE out” and “Justice for Renee Good.”
“They’re frightening young children who are there to worship on a Sunday morning,” Vance commented. “As long as we have the authority, those individuals will face imprisonment.”
He further emphasized, “While you have the right to protest, others have the right to practice their faith without interference. Disrupting that is against the law.”
Some Minnesota faith leaders, backed by labor unions and hundreds of Minneapolis-area businesses, are planning a day of protests on Friday to push back against the administration’s crackdown. Nearly 600 local business have announced plans to shut down, while hundreds of “solidarity events” are expected across the country, according to MoveOn spokesperson Britt Jacovich.
“Masked federal agents are teargassing babies and pastors, seizing our neighbors and shipping them off to foreign torture prisons, and killing innocent people,” protest organizers wrote.
Gregory Bovino, the official who leads the White House’s border patrol operations, said federal agents had the authority to enter private homes in Minnesota without a judicial warrant as part of their crackdown.
“We don’t break in anybody’s homes. We make entry in either a hot pursuit with a criminal arrest warrant or an administrative arrest warrant,” Bovino said at a news conference.
The Associated Press reported on Wednesday that federal immigration officers were asserting sweeping power to forcibly enter houses without a warrant, according to an internal ICE memo, in what is a reversal of long-standing guidance meant to respect constitutional limits on government searches.
Bovino condemned Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey and Gov. Tim Walz – both Democrats – and other officials for using “violent rhetoric,” while describing city police as “missing in action” and protesters as “anarchists.”
Vance’s stop in Toledo was focused primarily on bolstering the Republican administration’s positive economic message on the heels of Trump’s appearance at the World Economic Forum in Davos. The vice president also took the opportunity to boost some of Republicans’ important statewide candidates in this fall’s midterm elections, including gubernatorial contender Vivek Ramaswamy and U.S. Sen. Jon Husted.
Convincing voters that the nation is in rosy financial shape has been a persistent challenge for Trump during the first year of his second term. Polling has shown that the public is unconvinced that the economy is in good condition and majorities disapprove of how Trump’s handling of foreign policy.
Vance urged voters to be patient on the economy, saying Trump had inherited a bad situation from Democratic President Joe Biden.
“You don’t turn the Titanic around overnight,” Vance said. “It takes time to fix what is broken.”
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Carr Smyth reported from Columbus, Ohio, and Peoples from New York.
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