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Tom Homan Makes It Clear That Trump’s Mass Deportation Policy Hasn’t Changed

Inside those closed‑door meetings, the tone was blunt, almost transactional. Homan offered local leaders a way to calm the streets without appearing to invite an occupying force: no mass raids, no made‑for‑TV perp walks, just quiet phone calls from county jails to ICE. In return, he wanted public silence and private signatures—agreements that would give federal agents a green light while letting city officials claim their hands were tied. It was a bargain dressed up as “coordination.”

But outside, the narrative was slipping beyond anyone’s control. Families of the dead demanded names, tapes, accountability. Activists warned that “silent” cooperation is still a knock at the door at 4 a.m. Homan’s defiance thrilled some, terrified others, and left Minneapolis staring at a brutal choice: accept a fragile, federally managed calm, or risk a deeper spiral of unrest, knowing the next confrontation could end with more bodies on the asphalt.

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