Nashville ICE raid reignites city's turmoil with GOP leaders
An unsteady truce between Nashville's Democratic mayor and Tennessee's Republican leaders just collapsed after an ICE dragnet in the city.
Tension began to build in early May, when ICE started making traffic stops in partnership with the state highway patrol in the immigrant-heavy neighborhood of South Nashville, leading to the arrests of nearly 200 suspected undocumented immigrants.
Mayor Freddie O'Connell quickly condemned the action as damaging to the community. And a GOP firestorm resulted, with Republicans accusing O'Connell of interfering with federal immigration enforcement.
Four weeks later, a simple public policy spat has turned into a major conflict between some of the most powerful leaders in Tennessee, breaking a fragile peace between the city and the GOP supermajority legislature – and exposing Nashville to the wrath of the Trump administration. The feud, which shows no signs of ending soon, comes with real potential consequences for Nashville and other blue cities in red states being targeted over their immigration policies.
'It's unfortunate that he's willing to support the law breakers instead of supporting us as the lawmakers,' state Rep. Rusty Grills, a Republican, said of the mayor.
O'Connell, who has worked to calm long-running tensions with Republicans since his election in 2023, is the latest target of GOP ire over perceived threats to President Donald Trump's deportations, and the onslaught against the mayor also represents a further escalation in the administration's attack on local officials. In New Jersey, Newark Mayor Ras Baraka was arrested in May on a trespassing charge outside an ICE facility. That charge was later dropped, but U.S. Rep. LaMonica McIver is facing assault charges from the same confrontation.
In Tennessee, Republicans in the state legislature told POLITICO that O'Connell was putting officers at risk by updating a longstanding executive order mandating that city officials disclose interactions with ICE to the mayor's office within 24 hours. They have latched onto that as evidence the mayor is impeding law enforcement operations.
O'Connell, speaking at a press conference following the raids, said the city does not have the authority to enforce immigration laws, and noted that Nashville's crime rates are down. He has maintained that the city did not interfere with the ICE operation in early May.
Yet GOP outrage has spread from Tennessee to Washington. O'Connell is facing a federal investigation from House Republicans announced last week, and a call for another from the Department of Justice by Sen. Marsha Blackburn, who all argue that O'Connell is impeding law enforcement's ability to crack down on crime committed by illegal immigrants.
U.S. border czar Tom Homan has warned that Nashville could see larger immigration crackdowns as a result of O'Connell's opposition.
'We'll flood the zone in the neighborhoods to find the bad guy,' Homan said on Fox News last week. 'We'll flood the zone at work sites to find the bad guy, but we're going to do it, and [O'Connell's] not going to stop us.'
Republicans have also gone after O'Connell for highlighting a donations fund that supports individuals affected by the arrests, like children whose parents were detained. Republicans say the fund is an improper use of taxpayer dollars, although the fund was created by a nonprofit that says it exclusively uses private donations.
Tennessee Democrats and immigrant advocates say that Republicans are cheering ICE's involvement because of a bad-faith view of immigrant communities and that the criticism of O'Connell is purely GOP rhetoric lacking any basis. They also say the sweep shows how the Department of Homeland Security is taking in people that pose no threat to the public. DHS said about half of the people arrested have criminal records, but only identified four of them – leading Democrats to demand more information about those detained.
'For the politicians who care about nothing but the national news, this is a symbolic story,' said Democratic State Sen. Jeff Yarbro. 'But for those of us who represent communities where we've seen lawless dragnet policing, there are real life consequences to our community and to our neighbors.'
The raid's scale and scope was 'unlike anything we've ever seen before,' said Lisa Sherman Luna, the executive director of the Tennessee Immigrants & Refugee Rights Coalition.
The Tennessee Highway Patrol's cooperation with ICE underscores the role states will play in carrying out the Trump administration's immigration agenda – especially as DHS struggles to hit its deportation goals. GOP leaders eager to impress the president have taken steps in recent months to deputize local law enforcement as immigration enforcers, like in Georgia, where Gov. Brian Kemp recently signed a law requiring law enforcement to check the immigration status of detainees.
'They are building an infrastructure that we've never seen, especially for a non-border state, to really carry out the President's agenda of mass deportations,' Luna said of the ICE operation in Nashville. 'The devastation for families and local communities is going to be deep and broad, because everyone is a target now, and so it's really alarming to see our state government being used in this manner.'
Tennessee Republicans have framed the conflict as a matter of law and order – arguing that the ICE raids were a necessary use of force to crack down on crime they blame on illegal immigrants. Under the leadership of Gov. Bill Lee, Tennessee has emerged as one of the most aggressive non-border states on immigration in the second Trump era.
Lee, to the surprise of many Tennesseans, was the first Republican governor to say in January before Trump's inauguration he was readying the National Guard should they be called upon to aid in deportations. In January, a few days after attending a governors meeting at Mar-A-Lago, Lee tacked onto immigration legislation as part of a special session on school vouchers. Lawmakers then passed a sweeping law expanding local law enforcement's immigration purview and making it a felony for state officials to establish sanctuary cities.
Nashville is not a sanctuary city. But Democrats there still view the law as a warning shot from the legislature, which has clashed with city leaders over a range of issues — from control of the airport to representation in Congress.
'We wanted to send a signal that Tennessee was ready to cooperate and welcomed ICE coming into our communities to get these violent people out,' said state Sen. Jack Johnson, a Republican. 'So I'm very, very happy with it and excited, and I hope they do more.'
And many want to see ICE return. State Sen. Brent Taylor has asked Homan to send ICE to Memphis to address 'the violent crime epidemic' that he says is 'exacerbated by poor local leadership.'
Shelby County, where Memphis is located, was included on a list of sanctuary cities and counties published by DHS last week that was soon taken down. Leaders of Shelby County, Memphis and Nashville — which was also on the list – disputed their designation as sanctuary cities, which have been outlawed by the Tennessee legislature.
State Sen. Jody Barrett described relations between Nashville and the GOP legislature as a 'forced marriage,' complicated by the fact that Nashville serves as the state's economic engine. Nashville's population has exploded in recent years, and the city's tourism industry keeps the state coffers filled.
'And because of that, it's kind of a love-hate relationship,' he said.
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