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Los Angeles protests follow weeks of intensifying immigration enforcement

Los Angeles protests follow weeks of intensifying immigration enforcement

The Pentagon's deployment of about 700 Marines to Los Angeles to join the National Guard's response to immigration protests follows weeks of rapid-fire developments as President Donald Trump pursues his top domestic priority for mass deportations.
Stephen Miller, the White House deputy chief of staff and chief architect of Trump's immigration policies, said late last month that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement should make at least 3,000 arrests a day. That would mark a dramatic increase from Jan. 20 to May 19, when the agency made an average of 656 arrests a day.
Miller's target has brought new strains on immigration detention and increased ICE's presence to a level with no recent parallels.
Increased arrests
Tensions soared in Los Angeles after a series of sweeps starting last week, including in the city's fashion district and a Home Depot, pushed the tally of immigrant arrests in the city past 100. A prominent union leader was arrested while protesting and accused of impeding law enforcement. Trump sent the National Guard and Marines over objections of state officials.
But even before Los Angeles, ICE stepped up its presence with rare shows of force featuring officers in heavy tactical gear firing flash bangs. Officers engaged in a tense standoff at a popular Italian restaurant in San Diego's trendy South Park neighborhood on May 30 in an operation that resulted in four immigration arrests.
In Massachusetts, a high school student was arrested on May 31 on the way to volleyball practice. Asked why ICE detained an 18-year-old with no criminal record, acting ICE Director Todd Lyons answered, 'I didn't say he was dangerous. I said he's in this country illegally and we're not going to walk away from anybody.'
ICE has also worked with the Tennessee Highway Patrol, which conducted nearly 600 traffic stops and arrested about 200 people in recent weeks.
Stretched resources
With no additional funding and limited staff, ICE is drawing from other federal agencies and local police to carry out deportations. The number of 287(g) agreements to deputize local police to enforce federal immigration laws has more than quadrupled — to about 650 — since Trump took office in January.
ICE also lacks the detention space to carry out Trump's agenda, leading to overcrowding in some locations. The agency is budgeted to detain about 41,000 people but held more than 53,500 at the end of May, approaching the all-time highs of 2019.
A massive spending bill winding through Congress calls for $45 billion to go toward increasing immigration detention capacity to 100,000 and $8 billion to add 10,000 ICE personnel.
The Los Angeles arrests have created an opening for Trump to tie into one of his favorite targets: state and local governments that limit cooperation with federal immigration authorities. California limits cooperation except when people in the country illegally are convicted of serious crimes.
The White House recently published a list of more than 500 'sanctuary' jurisdictions but removed it from its website after widespread criticism that it was inaccurate, including from allies like Huntington Beach, California.
Fire hose of news
The volume of immigration policy changes has not slowed since Trump took office, reaching a breakneck pace in recent weeks.
On Friday, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran man mistakenly deported and imprisoned without communication, was returned to the United States to face criminal charges related to human smuggling.
People showing up for hearings to pursue legal status at immigration courtrooms have been met with a spate of arrests across the country. And a travel ban and restrictions on 19 countries took effect Monday.

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Wildfires Push Climate Onto the Agenda as G7 Leaders Meet in Alberta
Wildfires Push Climate Onto the Agenda as G7 Leaders Meet in Alberta

Canada Standard

time29 minutes ago

  • Canada Standard

Wildfires Push Climate Onto the Agenda as G7 Leaders Meet in Alberta

With the G7 leaders' summit due to descend on Kananaskis, Alberta June 15-17, questions are swirling about what Canada can accomplish with this year's G7 presidency and how agreement is possible with Donald Trump in the room-while swirling smoke from a devastating Prairie wildfire season helps bring climate change back onto the leaders' agenda. Now in its 50th year, the G7 brings together the leaders of seven of the world's biggest economies plus the European Union in what is described as a "forum for co-operation, stability, and shared prosperity." The leaders' summit each year is meant to end with a consensus statement of all the countries. But community voices on everything from climate change to international finance and justice have rarely been satisfied with the outcome. Much of the news analysis leading up to this year's event has cast the G7 as a diminished institution, reduced to handshakes, photo ops, and carefully-worded generalities that are the most the countries can agree to. Coming into this year's summit, the G7's "legitimacy is hanging by a thread. Its promises have fallen flat, its unity is strained, and its moral voice is fading fast," retired civil servant Bhagwant Sandhu writes for The Hill Times. "Originally conceived as a multilateral pact among Western democracies to steward global economic control, the G7 was never intended to serve the desires of its most powerful-and now unpredictable and illiberal-member: the United States," he adds. "The group's initial goals have been obscured by authoritarianism, unilateral action, and creeping militarization." That leaves Prime Minister Mark Carney with a choice, Sandhu says. 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But much of the attention so far has been on the chaos Trump will bring to the table, just as he did in 2018 when Canada last hosted the G7 in Charlevoix, Quebec. Then, as now, U.S. tariffs were at the centre of the discussion, and Trump issued two angry tweets pulling the U.S. out of the leaders' final communique, just hours after countries had signed off on the text. "A show of unity on big geopolitical problems that holds longer than a few hours after President Donald Trump's participation will be seen as success after the American president in 2018 blew up a fragile consensus even before he left the last Canada-hosted G7 in Charlevoix, Que., later angrily insulting then-prime minister and G7 host Justin Trudeau," writes Toronto Star Ottawa bureau chief Tonda McCharles. This time around, "a key performance indicator for the summit will [be] getting something down that all leaders can agree upon that will also include the U.S.-and that will be a challenge," Deanna Horton, a diplomat who served twice in the Canadian embassy in Washington, told The Hill Times. On June 11, McCharles reported that organizers of this year's summit are not looking for a final communique that represents a consensus of all G7 members. "Instead, G7 host Carney is expected to issue a G7 chair's statement and the closed-door high-stakes sessions that could nevertheless produce some heated discussions will be summarized in documents likely to be so whitewashed of the juicy bits, that they could almost be written in advance." The Star has details on how the Summit agenda is likely to play out. Carney has also stirred controversy with the list of "middle power" countries he's invited to the summit. 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"Its climate commitments remain stalled, and the vaunted $600-billion infrastructure pledge to the Global South-first announced in 2021 as the 'Build Back Better World' initiative-has been more frequently rebranded and re-announced than realized," Sandhu writes for The Hill Times. Moreover, "the G7 has yet to fulfill its decades-old promise to allocate 0.7% of each member's gross national income to humanitarian aid. At the start of the 2023 Hiroshima summit, it was still short by a staggering US$4.49-trillion. More troubling still, members like the United Kingdom have diverted aid funds from humanitarian crises to finance NATO expansions, raising serious questions about the group's priorities." In a release this week, Oxfam warned the G7 is in the midst of its biggest-ever foreign aid cut. 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Meanwhile, in a G7 agenda stripped bare of any language that could rile up a volatile U.S. president, author Arno Kopecky says the massive wildfires covering swaths of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and British Columbia are playing into Canadian officials' plan for keeping climate change in the conversation. When officials first began planning the meeting last year, "Canada's Liberal government wanted the G7 to discuss climate change (the host nation sets the summit agenda), but what if Donald Trump was there as President?" Kopecky writes for the Globe and Mail. "This was no abstract worry either: the day before Jasper caught fire, Joe Biden had dropped out of the presidential race, and the Democrats' prospects looked dismal." Officials "knew that if they start with the standard stuff on climate change, Donald Trump and his people would get out their red pens and just say 'no way,'" John Kirton, founding director of the G7 Research Group, told Kopecky. "So then, what is your strategy? And wildfires was the answer." The difference, Kopecky writes, is that while Trump refuses to listen to climate science, he's seen a rash of wildfires since he returned to the White House in January, and his country is now receiving smoke from the blazes in Canada. "So Donald Trump's got a reason to be seen to be doing something about it," Kirton said. It also "speaks volumes" that the energy security section of the G7 agenda talks about artificial intelligence, but makes no reference to oil and gas, Kopecky writes. Source: The Energy Mix

WATCH: The 2025 G7 Leaders' Summit in Kananaskis, Spelled Out
WATCH: The 2025 G7 Leaders' Summit in Kananaskis, Spelled Out

Calgary Herald

time43 minutes ago

  • Calgary Herald

WATCH: The 2025 G7 Leaders' Summit in Kananaskis, Spelled Out

Article content As world leaders gather in Alberta from June 15 to 17, this episode of Spelled Out breaks down what the G7 actually is, why it matters, and what to watch for this year. Reporter Bill Kaufmann sets the scene for the three days of meetings in Kananaskis, about one hour west of Calgary, looking at the impact of everything from the war in Ukraine to AI, climate change, and the return of Donald Trump. Article content Article content Article content What is the G7? Article content The G7 is a club of the world's richest democracies: the U.S., U.K., France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and Canada. The European Union also takes part. Article content It started in the 1970s, during a time of global economic chaos, as a way to figure out how to keep the global economy steady. Article content And for half a century, they've been meeting every year, discussing everything from trade to terrorism to tech. Article content The 2025 agenda is packed: economic recovery, climate change, AI, the digital transition, and of course, the war in Ukraine. Article content Article content But what makes this summit especially unpredictable is the return of U.S. President Donald Trump. He's known for challenging traditional alliances and for bringing plenty of drama to global forums. Article content Zelenskyy is pushing for tougher sanctions on Russia and more weapons and aid for Ukraine but that could rub Trump the wrong way, given his reluctance to escalate pressure on Moscow. Article content Article content While a lot of the action happens in front of the cameras, much of the work can take place on the sidelines. Article content At summits like this, leaders break off into smaller, private meetings — sometimes one-on-one. These quiet moments are often where real deals and negotiations happen. Article content Most of the area around the summit site in Kananaskis is closed to the public. Designated protest zones are set up in Calgary and Banff, where over 1,400 journalists will be reporting from an international media centre. Article content

After days of raids, Los Angeles day labourers set aside their fear to support their families
After days of raids, Los Angeles day labourers set aside their fear to support their families

CBC

time2 hours ago

  • CBC

After days of raids, Los Angeles day labourers set aside their fear to support their families

Social Sharing Most days, Edwin Ciara positions himself on a median at the entrance to the Home Depot parking lot along Wilshire Avenue in Los Angeles and waits for a contractor who might give him a few hours of work. In time, he'll move to another spot in the city — dipping into a fresh hiring pool because he doesn't want to stay in the same place too long. "Everybody who's coming here, they're coming here to survive," said Ciara, 57, reading glasses hanging from his collar as he leans against a parking lot lamp post. "We're doing nothing wrong to anybody here. We are looking for a job." Day labourers have returned to Home Depots in the Los Angeles area after the stores were targeted by Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers during raids last Friday. They wait on sidewalks and medians to be hired by the homeowners and contractors who rely on the undocumented workforce. The hardware store chain has found itself at the centre of raids across the city that have been criticized by city and state officials. The raids also prompted numerous protests that resulted in what some say is an outsized response from U.S. President Donald Trump, who deployed the National Guard and marines. Officials have raided a number of Home Depot locations since Friday, including Westlake, Paramount, Whittier and Huntington Park. "The people who don't have papers, we are feeling panicked. People work hard to come here to L.A. or the U.S.A. and they're taking us to go back to our country," said Ciara, who immigrated to the U.S. from Guatemala nearly 35 years ago. WATCH | L.A. day labourer says workers are just trying to feed families: 'Standing in front of the Home Depot for work to feed our family? Is that our crime?' 7 hours ago Duration 2:59 'These guys are troopers, man' In Westlake on Wednesday, private security guards assigned to patrol the strip-mall parking lot greeted the labourers with nods and handshakes. One guard, who declined to provide his name because his employer doesn't want guards to speak to the media, said some of the labourers didn't wait long to return after Friday's raid because they have families depending on their income and are here to work, not cause trouble. "These guys are troopers, man." Nearly 50 kilometres southeast of Los Angeles, several more men sought respite from the heat of the day under some trees while waiting for work outside another Home Depot in Santa Ana. They know their freedom is at risk, but financially, they say they have no choice. "It's nonsense. It's ridiculous. We haven't done nothing wrong. Standing in front of the Home Depot for work to feed our family? Is that our crime?" asked Edbin Rios Perez, 24, who crossed the border from Mexico to the United States with his family as a child around 2008. "I don't have papers and I'm still here, risking my life to provide." Perez says he's seen ICE officers around and knows they could come after him. He and the others keep watch for black trucks, just as the men in Westlake do. "I am scared, honestly, but I don't want to show it because as a man, we gotta be there," he said. "I'd rather have my kids see that I'm not scared. My father, my mother? I still make them laugh, like, 'Hey, I'm OK.' But in reality, I'm not." WATCH | ICE raids strike fear in workers, L.A. business owner says: Workers too afraid to show up amid ICE raids, says L.A. business owner 9 hours ago Duration 8:17 Undocumented residents steer clear of protests Los Angeles police say that since protests began Saturday, they have made nearly 400 arrests and detentions, the vast majority of which were for failing to leave the area at the request of law enforcement. Nine police officers have been wounded, mostly with minor injuries. On Tuesday, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass imposed a curfew encompassing one square mile of the city between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m. PT, in what she said was an effort to control vandalism and looting. By Wednesday, there was little sign of any unrest in the city's core. Hundreds of marines deployed to join thousands of National Guard personnel were out of sight, completing civil disobedience training at a Navy facility in Orange County. While the streets calmed, the fight between Trump and California Gov. Gavin Newsom picked up steam. Newsom, a Democrat, said the president's rare decision to deploy the marines on U.S. soil and the National Guard without state approval was in line with "authoritarian regimes." From the Home Depot parking lot in Westlake, the epicentre of the protest downtown is easy to spot in the skyline on account of the helicopter circling overhead. People who are undocumented are staying well away from the area, Ciara said. They're scared, but Ciara says he worries the entire scene — from the protests to the military to the politics — is distracting the public from the raids themselves and making the situation worse for those in hiding. "When the people who are legal here are doing something wrong, they think the people who are illegal are doing that, too," he said. "We are just trying to make things all right."

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