Gov. Tony Evers calls White House border czar's threat over ICE guidance ‘chilling'
Gov. Tony Evers had already said he wasn't directing state employees to break the law should immigration officials enter state buildings. Evers answers reporters questions in March. (Photo by Baylor Spears/Wisconsin Examiner)
Gov. Tony Evers issued a three-minute video Friday in which he addressed Wisconsinites, describing a statement from the White House border czar Tom Homan that has been interpreted by some as a threat to arrest Evers as 'chilling.'
Homan made the vague threat after a reporter for the far-right website Gateway Pundit asked him 'why not just arrest' leaders interfering with deportation efforts. The reporter then specifically asked him about Evers' directive to state agencies instructing them to consult an attorney if federal immigration agents enter state buildings demanding files or computer system access.
'Wait to see what's coming,' Homan said. 'You can not support what we're doing and you can support sanctuary cities if that's what you want to do, but if you cross that line of impediment or knowingly harboring or concealing an illegal alien, that is a felony and we'll treat it as such.'
Before the comment, Evers had already said he wasn't directing state employees to break the law should immigration officials enter state buildings.
'A Trump Administration official, in not so many words, apparently threatened to arrest me… The goal of this guidance was simple — to provide clear, consistent instructions to state employees and ensure they have a lawyer to help them comply with all federal and state laws. Nothing more, nothing less,' Evers said in the video. 'But Republicans and their right-wing allies, including Elon Musk, lied about this guidance, spread misinformation, accused me of doing things I didn't do or say, and fueled a fake controversy of their own creation.'
The guidance sent by the Department of Administration to state employees told them to stay calm if an ICE agent entered their offices. It told them to ask agents for their names and badges to verify their identity, to ask why they were there, ask for documentation like a valid warrant then tell the agent to have a seat. It said state employees should call the Office of Legal Council to consult an attorney.
It also told employees not to answer questions from an agent, give them access to paper files and computer systems without speaking to an attorney and not to give consent for an agent to enter a 'nonpublic' area, noting that they need a judicial warrant to enter such an area.
'Remember that every state employee has a duty to protect confidential data and information collected or maintained by the State of Wisconsin in state offices and electronic filing systems,' the guidance stated.
'I haven't broken the law. I haven't committed a crime, and I've never encouraged or directed anyone to break any laws or commit any crimes,' Evers said in the video. 'When President Trump's hand-picked appointee, Tom Homan, was asked about me and this guidance after he apparently threatened to arrest elected officials across the country, he said, 'Wait 'til you see what's coming.' Overnight, Republican lawmakers piled on, encouraging the Trump Administration to arrest me.'
Evers' directive had received backlash from Wisconsin Republicans who called on Evers to rescind the guidance and support Trump's deportation agenda.
One Republican state lawmaker Rep. Calvin Callahan (R-Tomahawk) suggested in multiple social media posts Thursday that Evers should be arrested — sharing an AI-generated photo of Evers in handcuffs and writing in another post that 'this is what Tony Evers sent out; stick him in the same cell as the Milwaukee judge!' Milwaukee County Judge Hannah Dugan was arrested last week under accusations that she impeded the arrest of a man that ICE followed to her courtroom.
Evers said the threats should concern everyone.
'In this country, the federal government doesn't get to abuse its power to threaten everyday Americans. In this country, the federal government doesn't get to arrest American citizens who have not committed a crime. In this country, we don't threaten to persecute people just because they belong to a different political party,' Evers said.
'These threats represent a concerning trajectory in this country. We now have a federal government that will threaten or arrest an elected official — or even everyday American citizens — who have broken no laws, committed no crimes, and done nothing wrong,' Evers said. 'As disgusted as I am about the continued actions of the Trump Administration, I am not afraid. I have never once been discouraged from doing the right thing, and I will not start today.'
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
38 minutes ago
- New York Post
Bill Maher mocks Dems for trying to find ‘their Joe Rogan,' suggests figuring out how they lost him
'Real Time' host Bill Maher mocked the Democratic Party's attempt to find 'their Joe Rogan,' pointing out the irony that the podcaster had leaned left until he became disillusioned with the party. The host explained, 'One idea that's getting a lot of attention is the Dems need to find their Joe Rogan, a liberal Joe Rogan.' Maher argued that rather than 'conjuring up a new Joe Rogan,' Democrats should be asking themselves how they lost him in the first place. Advertisement Rogan previously endorsed Sen. Bernie Sanders, D-Vt., in the 2020 election. It wasn't until 2024 that Rogan publicly endorsed President Donald Trump. The 'Real Time' host lampooned the idea that the real reason why former Vice President Kamala Harris lost the 2024 election is because 'Republicans have a podcast.' 'Okay, maybe. Or, you could consider this,' Maher jeered. 'Instead of conjuring up a new Joe Rogan, ask yourself why you lost the old one, because he used to be on your side.' In 2024, regarding the Democratic desire to find its own Rogan, the podcaster said, 'They had me.' 'I was on their side,' he added. Advertisement Maher noted that he's watched the political evolution of both Rogan and Musk and their party affiliations didn't switch 'overnight.' Youtube/Real Time with Bill Maher Maher compared Rogan's political transformation to Tesla CEO Elon Musk, who was also a liberal who ended up being 'driven to the other camp by bad attitudes and bad ideas.' Maher noted that he's watched the political evolution of both Rogan and Musk and their party affiliations didn't switch 'overnight.' Maher referenced a 2022 post on then-Twitter from Elon Musk in which he shared a chart depicting his feeling that the Democratic Party had moved too far to the left for him, rather than his ideology moving to the right. Advertisement Rogan previously endorsed Sen. Bernie Sanders, D-Vt., in the 2020 election. Rogan said that Democrats have moved so far that it 'left a basically liberal centrist like him — now labeled a conservative,' adding that he related to Musk's post. Maher also highlighted attempts by the left to cancel Rogan and Musk as a key reason they abandoned the party. Advertisement 'They tried real hard to cancel Rogan a few years ago — and when Elon hosted 'Saturday Night Live' in 2021, well before he was a Trumper — some of the cast gave him the cold shoulder for the sin of being rich,' he recalled. 'You think people don't remember when you do this s— to them?' The late-night host asserted that while he's never left the party, Democrats need to work hard to get 'all the guys in America like Joe and Elon' back on their side, but assured them that it's still possible.


CBS News
an hour ago
- CBS News
Demonstrators protesting ICE arrests in NYC taken into custody after clashing with NYPD
Several people were taken into custody Saturday as protesters and New York City Police officers clashed outside Federal Plaza in Lower Manhattan. Demonstrators were protesting United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement ramping up arrests of immigrants in the city and across the country. Protesters face off with NYPD officers outside Federal Plaza Dozens of protesters rallied for hours, facing off with NYPD officers at least twice. Just before 5 p.m., officers took down several protesters and put them in handcuffs. At one point, one protester was being pulled by one officers in one direction and protesters in another direction. At least one person was placed in ambulance. Protesters watching chanted "let them go" and booed officers as they took several people into custody. Several people were taken into custody as anti-ICE protesters and NYPD officers clashed outside Federal Plaza on June 7, 2025. CBS News New York Earlier in the day, things also got tense as activists attempted to block a white van from leaving a building at Federal Plaza. One protester told CBS News New York's Adi Guajardo they were trying to block ICE from taking migrants from the building. It's unclear if there were migrants in that van. "I don't think that there is any hope of us preventing them from moving the people out, but it doesn't mean that we can't try," one immigration activist said. Some of those who were taken into custody were issued summonses. According to data obtained by CBS News, at least 100,000 migrants have been arrested by ICE agents under the Trump administration. Advocates say it's becoming increasingly common for ICE to arrest migrants at their immigration court hearings.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Federal Agents Fire Tear Gas in Clashes With California Protesters
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and the Los Angeles Police Department said on June 6 that they were not aware that DHS and immigration agents would be in the area.