Chicago mayor lambasts Trump, claims US being run like 'had the Confederacy won'
Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson continued his attack on President Donald Trump on Wednesday, saying anyone questioning what the U.S. would look like had the Confederacy won, should have no question at this point under his administration.
A reporter asked Johnson during a press conference on Wednesday if he planned to go to Washington, D.C. to testify about sanctuary cities as the Trump administration continues to conduct operations targeting criminal illegal aliens.
House Republicans, including U.S. Rep. James Comer, R-Tenn., chair of the GOP-controlled House Committee on Oversight and Reform, called on sanctuary city mayors to testify next month about the policy's impact on public safety and the refusal to cooperate with federal immigration enforcement.
This oversight committee, of all the things that they want to have sight over, they should look at the White House right now," Johnson said. "That White House is being ran in one of the most raggedy forms of government that I've ever seen. If anybody is questioning whether or not what our country would look like had the Confederacy won, there should be no question now. They want us to be afraid. Do not be afraid, Chicago."
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The mayor said he will not be intimidated by an individual who refuses to stand up to another individual who believes "he's a supreme being."
Johnson also accused Trump of rejecting the U.S. Constitution by carrying out his responsibilities.
"If they want to have a real discussion about undocumented individuals who are criminals, they should look at the very individuals who enslaved my people and colonized this land," Johnson said.
Earlier in the press conference, another reporter asked the mayor if he had toned down rhetoric about relitigating the civil war.
Comer Launches Investigation Into Sanctuary Cities, Asks Mayors To Testify
"I still believe that there are people who have not accepted the results of the Civil War, and here's the thing: I said that before this administration took office," Johnson said. "Unfortunately, I'm right. I mean, you have an entire administration that is looking to take away federal protections for the people who are most vulnerable.
"So, no, my position has not changed," he added.
The mayor's statement comes more than a week after he doubled down on a vow to oppose Trump's sweeping reform aimed at removing dangerous illegal immigrants accused of crimes from the U.S. once he returns to the Oval Office.
Trump's Ice Nabs Child Sex Offenders Among 530+ Illegal Immigrants Caught In Single Day
On day one of his second term, Trump issued ten executive orders aimed at overhauling U.S. immigration law and policy, and since then, armed federal immigration agents have swept cities in the first deportation raids.
In a letter, Comer, Johnson and other mayors of sanctuary cities, to provide documents and information related to the sanctuary policies of each city.
Sanctuary cities limit cooperation between local law enforcement and federal immigration authorities. Supporters argue that enforcement of immigration is the job of the federal government.
Opponents say sanctuary policies harbor criminals, as well as those in the country illegally, and put the public, including legal and illegal immigrants, at risk.
Fox News Digital's Louis Casiano contributed to this report.Original article source: Chicago mayor lambasts Trump, claims US being run like 'had the Confederacy won'
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