Opinion
Guest
Essay
I’m the
Mayor of Minneapolis. Trump Is Lying to You.
Jan. 8,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/08/opinion/minneapolis-ice-agent-shooting-trump.html
By Jacob
Frey
Mr. Frey
is the mayor of Minneapolis.
On Aug.
1, 2007, the Interstate 35W bridge spanning the Mississippi River in
Minneapolis collapsed into the water during rush hour. Thirteen people died,
and dozens more were injured.
In the
immediate aftermath, the president, a Republican, showed up in a city full of
Democrats ready to help.
Minneapolis
leaders were passionate and vocal critics of President George W. Bush’s
policies at the time. But when the crisis struck, it didn’t matter. We were
partners in what mattered most: saving lives, steadying our community and
rebuilding infrastructure. Cities could count on the administration in a
crisis. Politics stopped, quite literally, at the water’s edge.
Blue
cities like Minneapolis used to be able to count on good-faith partnerships
with the federal government under both Republican and Democratic
administrations. Under the Biden administration, our police officers worked
with federal agents and the U.S. attorney’s office to bring down shooting rates
in North Minneapolis. The effort wasn’t political — it was practical, and it
continues to keep people safe.
But such
partnerships, in both crisis and ordinary governance, are not the experience of
big-city Democratic mayors under the Trump administrations. I learned that the
hard way in 2020 during the civil unrest that came in the wake of George
Floyd’s murder by a Minneapolis police officer. I’ll never forget the shock I
felt when President Trump not only encouraged violence during the unrest, but
denied federal approval for disaster relief.
On
Wednesday, when I learned that a Minneapolis resident had been shot and killed
by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent, I didn’t feel the shock in my
gut that I felt over five years ago. Nothing about this was shocking. The chaos
that ICE and the Trump administration have brought to Minneapolis made this
tragedy sadly predictable. In mid-December, ICE agents were filmed dragging a
pregnant woman through the street. Heavily armed agents have been deployed to
arrest lone individuals in public libraries and malls. Even in the aftermath of
this week’s shooting, ICE agents continued to spread chaos, apparently
deploying chemical agents at a local public high school.
The
actions of the ICE agents deployed to my city are dangerous, and now, even
deadly. But that danger has been compounded by the administration’s claim that
the victim committed an act of domestic terrorism. The Department of Homeland
Security secretary, Kristi Noem, baselessly insisted the shooting was an act of
self-defense. Mr. Trump falsely claimed that the victim, Renee Nicole Good,
“behaved horribly” and “ran him over,” referring to the ICE agent. I’ve watched
multiple videos, from multiple perspectives — it seems clear that Ms. Good, a
mother of three, was trying to leave the scene, not attack an agent.
The Trump
administration’s false narrative about this week’s shooting, and the
demonization of the victim, are only part of a bigger lie. It wants the
American public to believe that ICE’s heavily militarized crackdown across this
country is an effort to keep cities like Minneapolis safe. It is not. It is
about vilifying not just immigrants, but all who welcome them and their
contributions to our communities. By defending the lie about this clearly
avoidable shooting in Minneapolis and refusing to allow Minnesota officials to
investigate the crime, the administration is sending a message to the entire
country: If you show up for your immigrant neighbors, or even are simply
present when those neighbors are taken, your rights will not be protected by
the law and your life will be at risk.
Under
both the first and second Trump administrations, the country has learned from
watching Minneapolis that the federal government holds no regard for cities or
the people who live in them. When coupled with this administration’s open
contempt for democratic norms — indeed, our Constitution — this is a threat to
the long-term endurance of our Republic.
I hope no
more of my fellow mayors find their cities in this administration’s cross
hairs. But for those who do, here is my advice: The best thing you can do is to
build cities that work, and love those streets and those citizens above any
ideology. By bringing down violent crime, Minneapolis has been able to
successfully push back against those who have tried to portray our city as a
postapocalyptic hellscape. By building housing and focusing on affordability,
we have made our city a place that immigrants, transplants and native
Minneapolitans can all call home. By supporting immigrant-owned small
businesses, our city has become living proof that immigrants make our city and
our nation stronger.
Cities
are on the front lines of this dark hour in our national politics. But after we
weather this moment — and we will weather it — it will be on us to light the
way forward. The best way to convince the country that welcoming and lifting up
immigrants is good for its communities is by proving it in our own cities.


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