The Opinions - Tom Friedman: Minneapolis, Alex Pretti and a Democracy at Risk
Episode Date: January 27, 2026The Times Opinion columnist Thomas L. Friedman grew up in Minnesota and spent much of his career traveling to the Middle East. In the aftermath of the shooting death of Alex Pretti, and as the Trump a...dministration continues its crackdown in the Twin Cities, Friedman speaks with the editor Stephen Stromberg about the parallels he sees between his hometown and Gaza today.Thoughts? Email us at theopinions@nytimes.com.This episode of “The Opinions” was produced by Jillian Weinberger. It was edited by Alison Bruzek and Kaari Pitkin. Mixing by Sonia Herrero. Original music by Carole Sabouraud and Pat McCusker. Fact-checking by Mary Marge Locker. Audience strategy by Shannon Busta and Kristina Samulewski. The deputy director of Opinion Shows is Alison Bruzek. The director of Opinion Shows is Annie-Rose Strasser. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is The Opinions, a show that brings you a mix of voices from New York Times Opinion.
You've heard the news. Here's what to make of it.
I'm Steve Stromberg, an editor for New York Times Opinion, and I'm joined today by the columnist Tom Friedman.
Hi, Tom.
Hey, Steve.
You're joining us early on Monday morning because of the violence in Minneapolis over the weekend.
On Saturday, Customs and Border Protection agents shot and killed an ICU nurse and a protester
named Alex Preddy, just a couple of weeks after Ice Killed Renee Good in the same city.
Over the weekend, you published a column comparing Minneapolis to Gaza.
But I want to start with Minneapolis where you grew up.
What has it been like watching all of this unfold in your hometown?
Well, it's hugely painful and been talking to friends frequently.
And in fact, I chose to write that column over the weekend.
Literally because friends appeal to me to speak out.
I've been dealing with some personal health issues,
and so I haven't been able to actually get out to Minneapolis
as I want to and normally would.
And so I've just been watching it closely,
and it's just been so painful to see my hometown destabilized in this way,
but also torn apart.
And I finally decided I had to say something.
What are you hearing from the ground?
What I'm hearing from the ground from my friends is a mixture of pride and anguish.
Pride at the way Minneapolis has come together to defend residents from being dragged out of their homes or arbitrarily stopped on the street because they look like an immigrant.
And doing it basically peacefully with.
many more cell phones than snowballs. But at the same time, a real pain at the way the city,
its economy, and its community are feeling assaulted by the federal government. And so it was
both those things that really impelled me to want to write about Minneapolis. Now, let's talk
about that column because you brought an interesting angle to it. You compare Minneapolis to recent
events in Gaza, where Israeli forces recently killed three Palestinian journalists, and a couple
months ago, Hamas executed Palestinian rivals. What parallels do you see as someone who has covered
the Middle East for so long? And of course, someone who hails from Minneapolis and has that
personal connection. A few months ago, I wrote a column in which I pointed out that the Gaza War
still had no name. Nothing really stuck. Not the Yom Kippa War.
the October War, the Six-Day War. And I gave it what I thought was the right name. The War of the
worst, because this was the first Israeli-Arab-Palestinian War, where the worst of the worst were driving it
from each community. The worst in the Palestinian community, Hamas, the worst in the Arab community,
Hezbollah in Lebanon and the worst in Israel, the far-right annexationist settlers.
And that's always been really part of the background to me of this.
And it felt to me that the war, the street war in Minnesota also seemed to fall into that
category.
It's driven really by the worst people in the Trump administration, people like Stephen Miller
and Homeland Security Secretary Christie Nome.
and Trump himself, that they weren't trying to solve a problem.
They were trying basically to use a problem, to exploit a problem, to drive a wedge between us,
which pretty much applies to all the actors in the Gaza War as well.
And that's where it sort of started in my mind that all these people were actually using violence
to strengthen their political standing.
Bibi Netanyahu does not want the war in Gaza to end,
because he knows if it ends with Hamas in any way having political influence in Gaza and Israel out of Gaza,
he will be seen by his own constituency as a loser. Hamas doesn't really want to rearm. It doesn't want to leave Gaza,
even though the war had started, visited the worst disaster on Palestinians since 1948, because they want to hold on to power.
So they and Beebe have always been mutual enablers.
And Trump, we know, for a long time, has abjured looking for a legislative fix for our immigration
problems right now, something that would tighten the border, but also create a pathway for
the many millions now of illegal immigrants here, a pathway to legal citizenship.
And so I have a real allergy to people who want to exploit the problems for their political ends, not solve them.
And it seemed to me that there was a real common denominator here.
And you get even more specific than that.
You point out that the Republican Party is facing midterm elections this year, and Israeli Prime Minister Benyman Netanyahu is also likely facing an election this year.
What do you think in that context they're trying to achieve?
26, Steve, is going to be a very important year for both Israel and the United States.
I believe Israel today has the worst government in its history, led by the worst leader in its history.
This is a government that in the middle of the war continued pursuing a judicial coup, basically,
to break the oversight of the Supreme Court over Israel's political executive branch,
basically in order to pursue an annexationist agenda in the West Bank.
I believe that if this government is reelected and can complete that agenda, it will be the
end of Israel as you have known it.
And in America, if Republicans hold the House and Senate in 26 and continue to basically
have all the levers of power, the White House, the Supreme Court, the Senate, and the House,
and Donald Trump does not have to worry about re-election.
I just can't imagine what he might attempt to do,
and he would be totally unfettered.
And that will be a disaster for America.
So on the politics for a minute,
the recent time Sienna poll finds that a majority of Americans
strongly disapprove of the way ICE is doing its job.
Just last night, the Walshue Journal reported that some Trump advisors
are worried about polls like that.
these and about the escalation in Minneapolis. There have been some rumblings in Congress,
certainly among Democrats and among even some Republicans. Yet the president has so far persisted.
And I say so far because he told the journal that ICE would leave Minneapolis eventually,
which is sort of a possibly a prelude to a backdown. We're not sure. But it still sort of feels
like he hasn't gotten the memo until the last 24 hours or so. Is that how you read it?
Is he just so isolated from reality and how things are playing out that he feels like he's still winning or at least can't back down politically?
You know, Steve, I pointed out on my column that J.D. Vance showed up in Minneapolis last week and appealed for calm and peace and for people to cooperate with ICE.
And I pointed out that was really unusual because J.D. Vance is, I think, a deeply cynical person and has been.
been one of the people most active in denouncing what was going on there and a really divisive
leader. And for him to then show up in Minneapolis and say, let us reason together. Can't we all
just get along? I thought it was a tip-off that he was definitely channeling the views of Republicans
in the House and the Senate, which he presides over, that this is not working. It's not working on the
ground. It's not working politically. And so I suggested there were probably already a split.
And that was before the latest tragic killing of a demonstrator. So I will be not the least
bit surprised if Trump begins to pivot. It struck me even over the weekend that he was letting
Christy Nome take all the heat for this. And he could then come in his grandpa and say, come on
let's everybody calm down. I'll step back if you step back. So that's how I see that. Now, I also
pointed out in my column that since the whole immigration crisis emerged, going back to the first Trump
administration, my personal position is I'm for a very, very high wall on the border with a very, very big
gate. So I'm super pro-immigration, but there is no way we're going to maintain a consensus in
this country on immigration, if people feel the border is open. And I feel that was a huge mistake
of Democrats in the last election. I regret I didn't speak out even more strongly against it.
Because if people feel their communities are changing faster than they can culturally absorb,
and if they feel a sense of loss of control, they're going to do what? They went out and reelected
Donald Trump after January 6th.
So I think Democrats have to sit down and reflect on that as well.
I am not for open borders.
I'm for radically pro-immigration.
And the only way I'm going to be satisfied with my aspiration is if Americans feel the border is controlled.
Now, that said, Trump had a chance to do that.
He's controlled the House, the Senate, the White House, and the Supreme Court.
He could have passed any legislation he wanted for controlling the border and creating a legal pathway for people who are here working hard, being good citizens, contributing to their communities, both financially and culturally.
He could have done that.
That's exactly what we need.
And he hasn't done it because Donald Trump wanted that as a divisive issue.
He is a divider, not a uniter.
And that is what he also has in common with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Nainahu.
They both want to win by division, not addition.
Okay.
They both want to win by splitting their populations so finally that they can win the next election with 50.000,000,000, 1% of the vote.
And both of them are imperiling the unity of their democracies.
So you see Trump is comparable in cynicism to Netanyahu to Masa's leaders.
Oh, they're brothers from different mothers. Let's be very clear about that. Yeah. And this has to be thinking, though, this has me thinking of last week's crisis. Remember last week when we had a completely different thing to worry about? This is Trump's push for Greenland, this needlessly tense Davos summit, this framework, supposed framework that's going to fix the issue that Trump created.
we had been scheduled to record an episode on exactly that topic later in this week, instead of talking, you know, now we're talking a day earlier on a different crisis. But all of this has been thinking, the notion of American exceptionalism, you know, the claim that our system, our political culture, our principles, our leaders are unique in the world. It seems to have had a bad month, if not a bad decade. Is America's moral mojo gone?
What does all this mean for the United States and the world?
Well, you know, I consider myself a deep patriot.
I love my country.
I think it's one of mankind's greatest inventions, the United States of America.
And it plays a uniquely important role in the world.
You know, one of the problems with Stephen Miller and Donald Trump is that they never lived abroad.
And when you live abroad, what you learn is foreigners love to make fun of America.
we're so naive and we're so silly we think every problem has a solution.
But deep down, they deeply envy America.
They envy our optimism.
And they envy and appreciate our sense that, albeit crazy notion, that every problem does have a solution.
And if America goes dark, the whole world goes dark.
If we go selfish, the whole world grows selfish.
The world has been the way the world has been since the end of World War II, which is to say,
period of history, more peaceful and prosperous on a relative basis than possibly any 75 years
in world history. And it's been that way because America was the way America was. Yes, we
overpaid for NATO. We let countries like Japan after the war have access to our
markets to rebuild in a way that they took advantage of, even China after joined the World Trade
Organization. But the other side of that was that as the world's biggest economy, we benefited
enormously from the economic growth and disproportionately over the last 75 years. And we attracted
the world's best brains and most energetic people.
You know, last time I checked, Steve,
God distributed brains equally around the world.
What he didn't distribute equally is countries
that would openly embrace those brains.
And that's been America's single greatest competitive advantage.
Look at who runs our biggest tech companies today.
Their names are Sundar and Scyndar.
They have brought their energy and talent here.
And by the way, I wrote this a while back, any Haitian who can make a boat out of milk cartons and sail their way to the Florida coast, I want them in my country, okay.
But I want a legal framework that will create a pathway for these people to become my neighbor.
I was in Singapore about 10 years ago speaking to a senior government official there, and he said,
United States, you don't understand the gift that you have. You have the greatest gift,
which is people, everyone wants to come to your country. And I think about that a lot,
especially these days, because it does seem like that is changing. You speak about Trump and his
exertion of leverage. It seems like he's thinking is very short term, and he doesn't think about
the reputational effects of pressing Europe on Greenland and these relationships that he's fraying.
He doesn't think in those terms. Is this great American moment, this great Pax Americana that you're
talking about, how long is that viable? Is that sustainable as long as this sort of behavior
continues? Well, I think it's sustainable with the right leadership. And I think there are many
Republicans and Democrats who would offer that leadership. But I want to take you back to the beginning
of your question, Steve. And it's, again, about the immigration issue, which is so important to me.
So, look, I would born in Minneapolis in 1953. My dad's sister and brother-in-law, my uncle was indeed.
They came back from the war and decided to set out and try to set up a business in central,
West Central Minnesota in a town called Wilmer.
The time Wilmer was 99% white, Protestant, Catholic, mostly Scandinavian and German immigrants,
and three Jewish families, one of whom was Mayette and uncle.
They were the exotica in town.
So fast forward, seven, eight years ago, I went back to Wilmer.
Wilmer, Minnesota today is 40% Somali, Latino, and other immigrants.
and I wrote a column about how the town had transformed.
And had done so actually rather peacefully,
not without problems, not without challenges.
But I told this remarkable story about Wilmer.
I started my visit, though, at Wilmer High School.
And we're standing in the lobby, and it comes to be breakfast time,
and they have a breakfast break for students.
So they're all lined up for coffee and rolls.
and it looks like a Benetton ad.
I mean, it's just incredibly diverse.
So I say to the principal, do you have to have diversity class?
He kind of chuckled and said, yeah, we tried that.
And the student said, get lost.
Because Zhao is now dating Juan's sister.
And Aisha is best friends with Zhao's brother.
Okay.
This diversity is normal.
for them. And I do believe our country is in a transition now from a white majority country to a
minority majority country. It is a wrenching transition for some people because there are
Americans who've gone into the grocery store in the last 20 years and the woman at the cash register
was not wearing a baseball hat. And they went to the office and their boss rolled up a robot
and it was studying their job. Their sense of home.
of cultural norms and of work have all been destabilized at the same time. And along came a man
named Donald Trump who said, I will build a wall. The wall was not just about immigrants.
It was a wall against the gale forces of change. And I have a lot of sympathy for these people.
And we need leaders who can help us navigate this transition. And that's why I keep coming back.
And I warned at the end of this column I wrote.
to Democrats that it is absolutely vital that you couple every protest in Minneapolis or elsewhere
with a very loud commitment to a high wall with a big gate, to creating a legal process.
If Donald Trump won't do that, then make sure every American understands you will do that.
It's vital that Democrats make clear that if they get in power, they're not going to do
it to open the border. That was the disaster that got Trump reelected. They're going to do it to
partner with Republicans to create that legal framework to manage our opportunity and our challenges
of immigration. You're reminding me, I'm harking back now to my high school years. I was in
Los Angeles, in an inner city, very diverse high school, and we were required to do a genealogy
project. And we had folks from anywhere in the world you can think of. And this is their story about
how they came to the United States. And it was all prefaced by my U.S. history teacher pointing out that
he was a man of Chinese origin whose daughter would be, is, in fact, a candidate to be in the
daughters of the American Revolution, right? And only in America can this happen. And this is a very
positive way to think about America's increasing diversity and the image of
these communities that you paint. Of course, it's also the image that Donald Trump has successfully
demonized. You know, I just say one thing about my fellow Minnesotans, you know, who I'm really
proud of for the way they have risen up against this, what is a deliberate provocation, basically.
It's a unique place. You know, I always tell people this story when I was like five years old. There's
actually a Jewish mafia in Minneapolis. And my dad grew up with a lot of these guys. They're mostly
bootleckers. And one day when I was young, my dad came home and said, one of his friends have been
sent to jail. And when you're like five years old and your dad says he knows someone who went to
jail, like I just like, wow, it just blew me away. I said, dad, what did he do? My dad thought for a second,
I was just five. He said, son, he was shopping.
in a store before it was open.
That's Minnesota for breaking and entering.
It's that kind of place.
And whenever people ask me where I'm from, I say, well, I live in Beirut or Jerusalem or
Washington, but I am from Minnesota.
And you will never understand my column if you don't understand that.
Because my column is called Foreign Affairs it used to be.
but it really should be called Always Looking for Minnesota because I grew up in a time and place where politics worked.
I grew up in this amazing community with my contemporaries were Michael Sandel,
Norm Ornstein, Al Franken, the Cohn brothers, Peggy Ornstein.
We all grew up in this amazing time and place that instilled an incredibly powerful sense of community in us.
And that's what Minnesota is about.
And that is, to me, the tragedy of what is going on now, but also the beauty of watching people really dedicated to creating out of many one, to getting back to our national project, taking the streets to convey that message.
Well, and I want to dig into that a little bit more because you ended your last column on a hopeful note.
keep recording DHS's activities, you say. You do call for comprehensive immigration reform. You know, this is the sort of thing that before Trump, Democrats and Republicans had both previously supported. It was the sort of thing that seemed only a matter of time. And I sort of read into this a faith in democracy's ability to self-correct. Am I reading you correctly? Is there a hopeful horizon that you're seeing just maybe a few elections down the road or only one?
Well, I go back to that scene at Wilmer High School of those students.
I do believe a generation is coming where this kind of deep diversity will be the norm.
So my default setting is optimistic.
And by the way, that's without drugs.
Okay?
It comes naturally to me.
And it does come from growing up in Minnesota and seeing this change.
But there are two things that really worry me, Steve.
One is, if we lose our institutions, coming back will be next to impossible.
Institutions really matter.
And there are many criticisms one can make of Trump.
But one thing he has done that is just a travesty to me is that he's put in charge of some of our key institutions,
from health and human services to the FBI, to Homeland Security, people who in no
other administration would be seen as qualified for these jobs. And our institutions are what
distinguish us. What would Chinese give for one day of our FBI? What would Russians give for one
day of our Justice Department? And if we lose those institutions, coming back is going to be very,
very difficult. And those institutions are in peril right now. The other thing I would add is this.
We are going through a wrenching technological, social, and cultural transition.
The pot would be boiling no matter what.
But then along came Mark Zuckerberg, and he created an industry that profits by enraging and dividing us.
That boils the pot even more.
And then along came Donald Trump, and he took the lid off the pot.
And he made it permissible, politically profitable, to see.
say and do things to and about each other that no American president has ever done.
So we need two things. We need to ensure that our institutions hold. That's why the
2026 election is so important. And we need to turn the heat down on the pot and put the lid
back on. Tom, thanks so much for your time. Pleasure. Thank you.
If you like this show, follow it on YouTube, Spotify, or Apple.
The Opinions is produced by Derek Arthur, Veshaka, and Jillian Weinberger.
It's edited by Kari Pitkin and Alison Bruzik.
Mixing by Sonia Herrero.
Original music by Isaac Jones, Sonia Herrero, Pat McCusker, Carol Sabro, Ephem Shapiro, and Amon Sahota.
The fact-check team is Kate Sinclair,
Mary Marge Locker and Michelle Harris.
The head of operations is Shannon Busta.
Audience support by Christina Samuelski.
The director of opinion shows is Annie Rose Strasser.
