Masked, armed and wearing bulletproof vests, federal immigration agents stormed into Rayito de Sol day care in Chicago on Wednesday at 7 a.m. Without presenting a warrant, the agents dragged teacher Diana Galeano out from the day care’s vestibule. Despite her pleas of “I have papers,” urgently delivered in English and Spanish, the agents carted the teacher away as terrified children inside hid and parents outside filmed the arrest.
The arrest of Galeano, who has a valid work permit, is just the latest in a string of reports about the chilling, cruel and chaotic actions by Department of Homeland Security officers in Illinois.
Mr. President: Chicago, Portland and Los Angeles are not “the enemy.”
Thriving on the fear he is cultivating across the country he is supposed to be leading, President Donald Trump has unleashed militarized law enforcement onto the streets of Chicago. There, according to eyewitnesses and local reports, federal officers have zip-tied children, attacked clergymen with tear gas, tackled reporters doing their jobs and temporarily disappeared people based on their ethnicity and regardless of their immigration status.
On the campaign trail, Trump boasted he would be a “dictator” on day one. He has taken the unprecedented, unnecessary and unlawful step of turning the military on American cities to attack what he calls, the “enemy within.”
Mr. President: Chicago, Portland and Los Angeles are not “the enemy.”
Let’s call this what it is: political theater.
Wanting to play a strongman on TV, the president manufactured a crisis. He claimed Chicago needed to be “saved” and tried to deploy 500 members of the National Guard to the city, in a dangerous escalation of tensions he himself created.
That deployment is on hold, thanks to a federal judge’s order that the Trump administration is appealing to the Supreme Court. But in the meantime, under the president and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s direction, federal agents have conducted ruthless immigration raids across Chicago. They have forcefully arrested anyone — even the elderly, women and terrified children — that they suspect of being an immigrant.
And outside of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview, Illinois — where many detainees are being held — federal agents have met peaceful protestors, journalists and even local law enforcement with excessive force.
My constituents live in constant fear of arbitrary arrests and detentions.
I have always supported bipartisan, evidence-based ways to reduce violent crime. But excessive militarized ICE raids and misuse of the military for immigration enforcement and domestic policing will not make Chicago safer. The administration’s expansive use of the military across the country to support immigration enforcement activities is a dangerous distraction that hurts military readiness, pulls our Guardsmen and women away from home and wastes precious taxpayer dollars to the tune of up to $2 billion by the end of the year, per Pentagon estimates.
Rather than earnestly addressing crime, the Trump administration has hindered crime control efforts by Illinois leaders and slashed funding for crime prevention programs.
This was never about reducing crime. If it was, President Trump would have bolstered support for crime prevention programs, not cut them to the bone. Instead, the president has chosen to punish the states that did not vote for him.
As a senator and Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, I will use every tool at my disposal to push back against this president’s attack on our democracy.








