Consider This from NPR - How Chicago's ICE resistance was born
Episode Date: November 19, 2025Activists in Chicago have been tracking federal immigration enforcement agents' movements, following their cars and alerting neighbors with whistles. This resistance sprang into action in response to ...Trump's Operation Midway Blitz, but it's nearly a decade in the making. NPR's Odette Yousef has the story of a strategy that activists hope can be a blueprint.For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org. This episode was produced by Connor Donevan. It was edited by Andrew Sussman and Courtney Dorning. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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What's playing out right now in Charlotte, North Carolina is following a script that's
become familiar. Federal agents flood into cities for massive enforcement sweeps.
Videos pop up on social media showing massed agents in unmarked cars arresting people
who appear to be going about their daily lives. Local elected officials loudly object,
but the raids continue. The Trump administration says this is about enforcing the law
against people in the country illegally.
Here is Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem last month.
There are laws. They were on the books. They were put in place, voted on, and instituted,
and therefore we enforce them all. If members of Congress, senators, governors don't like the law,
then they should go through the work of changing them.
Even though these raids are happening in local communities, immigration law sits squarely
within the jurisdiction of the federal government. You could hear that tension in my interview with
Gavin Newsom, the Democratic Governor of California, this time.
summer. This was in the midst of a federal immigration crackdown in Los Angeles. Newsom condemned
the raids, but he also said this. We do not impede upon the federal authority to enforce federal
law with federal resources, period, full stop. That's the state of California. Without the authority
to stop the immigration operations, state and local politicians have tried to limit their impact
in other ways. California passed a state law that bans most law enforcement officers from wearing
masks, the Trump administration has sued to block it. In Illinois, Democratic Governor J.B. Pritzker
established an accountability commission to document alleged abuses by federal immigration
authorities. There will come a time where people of good faith are empowered to uphold the law.
When the time comes, Illinois will have the testimony and the records needed to pursue justice
to its fullest extent. Other politicians have focused on preparing their communities. Here's
Democratic Congressman Mike Quigley, whose district includes parts of Chicago.
What we can do is tell people what's happening. My office has created an immigration protection
kit, making sure people have completed privacy release forms so that our staff can assist them.
We also can find information about finding friends and family who might have been detained.
And Quigley told NPR, there's another tool available when the political process isn't.
protest. I always endorse peaceful protests and now's the time to step up and let people know just how
serious this has gotten. This is a president who has weaponized the tools of democracy.
Consider this. When federal immigration authorities deployed in Chicago, one neighborhood was
already prepared to resist. A group of activists thinks they have a blueprint other cities can follow
to disrupt the Trump administration's mass deportation effort.
From NPR, I'm Juana Summers.
It's consider this from NPR.
When it launched Operation Midway Blitz in September,
the Trump administration said it was going after,
quote, the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens
in Chicago. But the impact of this campaign has touched the lives of citizens and non-citizens
deeply. Heavily armed federal agents have deployed tear gas outside schools, shot pepper guns
in residential areas, prompted schools to go into lockdown. The resistance to the immigration
authorities has been fierce, and that is in part because some activists have been preparing for this
moment for years. NPR's Odette Yusuf went to see how it played out in one Chicago neighborhood. On the Monday,
after Halloween, it was clear that federal agents were mobilizing for a morning of raids in
and around the Chicago neighborhood of Rogers Park.
Do you have gas masks in your back?
When this happens, Jill Garvey and Gabe Gonzalez are ready to jump into a car at any moment.
He's on Peters and White GMC. Donnelly, Florida plates, DQ.
On the, there's horns.
Yeah, let's go.
A blizzard of encrypted text messages had already broadcasted to rapid response.
in the neighborhood, information about a vehicle seemed to have federal agents inside.
Gonzalez and another car make noise to warn people that ice is in the neighborhood.
He pulls up quickly to a biker who's also in pursuit.
Don't get that close to them. They'll grab you.
On the sidewalk, pedestrians are blowing whistles.
When the cars stop for a red light, one of them, a woman, runs into the street.
Don't get that close. Do not get that. No, no, no, no, no.
She bangs angrily against a window of the agent's vehicle.
Come back. Come back. Come back. Come back. Come back. Come back. Come back.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
The other car in pursuit peels off.
Gonzalez follows the agents as they turn west, but he eventually peels off too.
At this point, they're out of his neighborhood.
It was just two agents in one car, but that car we have seen before
involved in multiple abductions.
Gonzalez is a co-founder of Protect RP.
RP stands for Rogers Park, the neighborhood where he lives.
ProtectRP was launched in 2017 as a community defense network during Trump's first term.
The goal was to bring the neighborhood together to resist an expected onslaught of federal immigration enforcement.
In fact, that onslaught didn't happen, but now it has.
And the infrastructure and strategy of Protect RP has become one model for communities across the country.
their guiding principle is to make the work of immigration enforcement as inefficient as possible.
So that was 15, 20 minutes.
I'm sure he has no intention of being where he is right now.
So it's probably another 20 or, you know, another 10 or 15 for him to get back.
That's half an hour that he lost, right?
That's half an hour where he's not going to grab somebody.
That's all the time they have to pay him for not doing anything, the gas money, the,
I'm sure they grabbed up our license plates, so they're going to have to have time to run all of that stuff and blah, blah, blah, and time and money.
Time and money.
Gonzalez has spent his career as a community organizer.
Protect RP's team sees community organizing as exactly what's needed now when the stakes are higher than ever.
Jill Garvey says they're not just standing against heavy-handed immigration enforcement.
They're also pushing back against.
what she sees as an authoritarian strategy that unchecked could ultimately eat away at the freedom and rights of everyone in this country.
We often talk about places being sort of like lynch pens for a region.
Garvey is part of Protect RP's core team.
She's also the founder of a nonprofit called States at the Core, or Stack.
Up until now, Stack has mostly worked outside of Chicago, in Tennessee or Ohio, for example.
It supports local communities dealing with what it sees as authoritarian threats.
It could be a very small town that is trying to fend off Christian nationalism.
And they may be the thing that is standing in the way of that network or formation,
gaining more influence in the region.
In this moment, Garvey believes Chicago is a linchpin for the whole country.
I think that what's happening here is a net.
attempt to strengthen sort of a national police force and occupy a city for a long
time, terrorize the city for a long time, and make it normal so they can go and do that
in a lot of other places.
He can't breathe. Three days before I met with Garvey and Gabe Gonzalez, it was Halloween.
Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker had asked Homeland Security Secretary Christy Noam to stand
her agency down that weekend. Kids would be outside.
Noam refused.
It ended up being among the most violent days of this federal operation in the Chicago region.
He's touching him in the face.
You got three guys on him, and he's punching him.
Gabe Gonzalez witnessed it.
He shows me the video he took.
It was in Evanston, a suburb just north of Chicago.
Federal agents were so active there that day, the school's canceled outdoor recess.
Gonzalez and other residents were in cars following a vehicle that contained federal agents.
They wanted to let people nearby know that immigration enforcement was close by.
Gonzalez said the agents stopped suddenly and the vehicle behind crashed into them.
A crowd formed as Border Patrol agents jumped out and pulled the occupants out of the damaged car behind them.
Then Gonzalez said from amongst the crowd, a young white male ran up near the agents and they decked him.
The video shows two agents kneeling down on the man's back,
handcuffing him. As they pinned him down onto the street, a third agent punches the man's face
again and again. The Department of Homeland Security claims the agents were aggressively
tailgated by the vehicles behind them and that the young man had assaulted and grabbed an agent's
genitals. So far, no video evidence has clearly shown that. DHS said three people were arrested
all U.S. citizens and released without charges.
Gonzalez and others in ProtectRP say, while many have been stunned by federal tactics in Chicago,
they know that it's less surprising to communities of color.
But Operation Midway Blitz has created a shared experience across a much broader spectrum of people.
Gonzalez thinks the after effects will linger for a long time.
They've radicalized a set of people through their own actions.
And that'll be a generation before that goes away.
DHS didn't respond to questions for this story.
But speaking on Fox, Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino
blamed the governor of Illinois and the mayor of Chicago
for creating conditions hostile to immigration enforcement.
It's certainly a non-permissive environment.
That's the goal of those working with ProtectRP and similar networks,
one that they hope other cities will also achieve.
Odette Yousaf and PR News.
This episode was produced by Connor Donovan and Megan Lim.
It was edited by Andrew Sussman and Courtney Dorney.
Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan.
It's Consider This from NPR.
I'm Juana Summers.
