[Edited Message Follows]

Except that the general strike DID happen, with Minneapolis essentially 
shutdown for the day, and tens of thousands marching in protest.

>From the New York Times:

Tensions in
Minneapolis
Strike Over ICE
Shooting of Renee Good
Possible Troop Deployment
Investigating Democrats
Minnesotans on Edge
Demonstrators Flood Minneapolis Streets as Hundreds of Businesses Close to 
Protest ICE
Thousands of protesters shut down streets throughout Minneapolis-St. Paul to 
demand that federal immigration agents end their weekslong crackdown. 
Businesses closed in solidarity.

Listen to this article · 9:43 min Learn more
Thousands of people in the streets of Minneapolis.
Thousands of protesters shut down parts of Minneapolis and St. Paul on Friday 
as hundreds of businesses closed their doors.Credit...David Guttenfelder/The 
New York Times
By Chris HippensteelTalya MinsbergMaia Coleman and Summer Rabold
Talya Minsberg, Maia Coleman and Summer Rabold reported from Minneapolis-St.Paul
Jan. 23, 2026
Leer en español
Thousands of protesters shut down parts of Minneapolis-St. Paul on Friday as 
hundreds of businesses closed their doors, and workers and students stayed home 
to demand an end to the sweeping immigration crackdown that has roiled the Twin 
Cities for weeks.
The action on Friday, which unfolded in subzero temperatures, was the most 
widespread and organized demonstration since federal agents arrived in 
Minneapolis more than six weeks ago. It was aimed at pressuring the federal 
government to pull thousands of its agents from the streets.
Businesses, many of them locally owned, closed their doors to halt economic 
activity, saying that losing a day’s revenue was worth the cost to be part of 
the effort to end the immigration enforcement.
“There’s a time to stand up for things, and this is it,” said Alison Kirwin, 
the owner of Al’s Breakfast, a Minneapolis restaurant that closed on Friday. 
“If it takes away from a day of our income, that is worthwhile.”
The day of protests followed weeks of clashes between Minnesotans and federal 
agents, mostly in the Minneapolis and St. Paul areas. The immigration 
operation, which started late last year, has led to some 3,000 arrests, at 
least two shootings in Minneapolis and chaotic scenes on the streets.
Calls for the ouster of federal agents have grown from residents and local 
officials, especially after a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent 
fatally shot Renee Good, an American citizen, in Minneapolis on Jan. 7. 
Protesters and state officials have also filed lawsuits to restrict the agents’ 
conduct and to block the surge.
Image
A protester holds a bullhorn and others hold signs.
People dance during in a large scale protest against federal immigration 
operations in Minneapolis, Minn. on Friday afternoon.Credit...Vincent Alban/The 
New York Times
Image
People walking on snow-covered streets carrying protest signs.
Thousands marched through the streets of Minneapolis to protest federal 
immigration actions in the city.Credit...David Guttenfelder/The New York Times
The largest of the protests on Friday descended on downtown Minneapolis from 
late afternoon into the early evening, as thousands marched to the Target 
Center, the home arena of the state’s two professional basketball teams. 
Protesters carried signs and chanted over and over for ICE to leave the city.
Those in the crowd cited different indignities that drove them to the streets. 
Ms. Good’s killing. The aggressive tactics deployed by federal agents against 
demonstrators. The viral image of a five-year-old boy detained by ICE alongside 
his father.
“I got emotional,” said Butchy Austin, a founder of Brass Solidarity, a racial 
justice activist street band, as he looked at the crowd of thousands. “There’s 
resistance and a level of fight, but it’s a fight stemming from love for our 
neighbors.”
Mr. Austin said the group, which formed after the murder of George Floyd in 
2020, came out to the Target Center on Friday afternoon because they have seen 
“how music can bring resistance and joy, and a message of hope and change.”
Emerson Johnson, 19, had planned to come to the Twin Cities for the weekend. 
When she saw posters on her college campus about the march in downtown 
Minneapolis, she called her sister to push up her trip. “If you’re seeing the 
violence — and some of the things you are seeing are literally evil — I don’t 
know how you could see that and ignore it,” she said.
Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers, 
delivered an impassioned speech at the Target Center, praising Minnesotans for 
taking a day away from their typical activities to make their voices heard.
“We are meeting ICE violence with nonviolence,” she said. “We are meeting their 
chaos and cruelty with passion and community.
Hundreds demonstrated at the Minneapolis-St. Paul Airport earlier on Friday, 
some from as far away as New York, flitting in and out of one of its terminals 
to stay warm.
Inside, protesters shared hot chocolate and hand warmers, and compared the 
layers of clothes they used to brave the bitter cold. After warming up enough 
to face the elements, they returned to the sidewalk, while police officers 
warned them to stay out of the street or they would face arrest.
At one point, a group of clergy stepped off the curb, knelt on the pavement and 
began to pray.
“Everybody’s got a right to live and before this campaign fails, we’ll all go 
down to jail,” they sang. Protesters, many wearing snow suits and ski goggles, 
cheered as police arrested a few dozen of the clergy and loaded them onto buses.
That protests on Friday were part of general strike organized by residents, 
faith leaders and labor unions. The purpose, according to organizers, was to 
demonstrate the resolve of residents.
In neighborhoods around Minneapolis, many businesses and shops sat empty, with 
some posting signs in their windows expressing solidarity.
In St. Paul, Roots Roasting had an orange sign announcing their closing. 
“General strike,” it read. “No work, no school, no shopping, ICE out.”
Down the street, Spyhouse Coffee, part of a local chain, had a handwritten sign 
announcing its closure to “stand in solidarity with our community and other 
businesses.” The same was true for just about every coffee mainstay in the Twin 
Cities.
Image
A man walks down a street, against a wall with posters of Renee Good.
Many businesses across Minnesota closed on Friday as part of a general strike 
against the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown.Credit...David 
Guttenfelder/The New York Times
Image
A man in a red coat holds a sign that says “Love They Neighbor.”
The largest demonstration yet in Minneapolis took place on Friday to protest 
the federal deportation effort in the city.Credit...Vincent Alban/The New York 
Times
One of the few open was Misfit in Minneapolis, which occupies a large warehouse 
like building west of downtown. The owner, Marcus Parkansky, said his way of 
participating in the strike was to offer only coffee, pastries and espresso 
shots free of charge. Thanks to a donation from a woman in Texas, there will 
also be a bottle of bourbon and a bottle of Baileys, for those who want to 
spike their cup.
Mr. Parkansky said he hoped the strike shows the federal government how 
organized Minneapolis is. “What we want to see is for the shenanigans to stop,” 
he said.
Word of Friday’s strike and protests spread “like a wildfire” in the preceding 
days, said Jake Anderson, an executive board member with the St. Paul 
Federation of Educators, a union representing teachers and educational support 
professionals. Hundreds of businesses, mostly in Minneapolis and St. Paul, said 
they would close. On Friday, it seemed as though many followed through on that 
promise.
Federal officials have said that their presence is necessary to find people in 
the country illegally and to root out fraud in the state’s social services 
system. They have stood by their interactions with protesters and defended the 
ICE agent who killed Ms. Good.
The Hennepin County medical examiner’s office characterized Ms. Good’s death as 
a homicide, the result of gunshot wounds. It made no judgment on whether the 
shooting was justified.
Antonio Romanucci, an attorney for the Good family, said in a statement on 
Friday that “we are still waiting for their full report and hope that they 
communicate with Renee’s family and share their report before releasing any 
further information to the public.”
On Thursday, Vice President JD Vance said that the Trump administration wanted 
to “turn down the temperature” in Minneapolis. Mr. Vance, who said he had 
traveled to the city to understand the tensions, called protesters “far-left 
agitators” who had harassed federal agents. He also said a “failure of 
cooperation” by state and local officials was to blame for the situation 
getting “out of hand.”
Image
A man with a green balaclava covering his face.
Protesters at the Minneapolis-St. Paul Airport kicked off a day of 
demonstrations in the Twin Cities.Credit...David Guttenfelder/The New York Times
Image
A member of the clergy walks toward a bus.
Protests took place in Minneapolis-St. Paul to draw attention to the 
immigration crackdown.Credit...David Guttenfelder/The New York Times
In an email on Thursday, a Department of Homeland Security official called the 
strike “beyond insane,” asking, “Why would these labor bosses not want these 
public safety threats out of their communities?” The official then included a 
list of undocumented immigrants who had apparently been convicted of serious 
crimes.
Minnesota has 17 Fortune 500 companies. But they have not spoken publicly about 
the federal immigration activity, and none of Minnesota’s 15 biggest employers, 
including Target, UnitedHealth Group and Xcel Energy, responded to requests for 
comment this week.
Christa Sarrack, president of a union that represents about 6,000 hospitality 
workers. said some of their employers had decided to close for the day, while 
others were allowing employees to not come to work.
“We cannot simply sit by and allow this to continue,” Ms. Sarrack said. “We 
must use every tool that we have to fight back.”
For some employers, the choice over whether to participate has not been easy, 
because they simply cannot afford to lose a day’s revenue.
Andrew Schoenzeit, who owns Zipps Liquors in Minneapolis, kept his business 
open Friday. But he said he supported the strike and had no problem with the 
one employee who requested the day off to protest.
At some Minneapolis businesses that remained open on Friday, employees who 
showed up said that, even if they supported the strike in spirit, they couldn’t 
afford to go without pay.
”I have to pay for my tuition. I have to pay for rent, food, all the above,” 
said Joe Joyce, a shift lead at Potbelly, a sandwich chain. “It’s not like I’m 
rejecting the protest. I don’t really have much of a choice to come in.”
Image
The Minnesota flag is draped over the shoulders of a protester.
Protests against immigration actions taken by the federal government reached 
their largest level yet on Friday.Credit...Vincent Alban/The New York Times
For some leaders of local and state unions, the decision over whether to 
encourage their members to participate in the general strike was difficult, 
because it was not organized under state and federal strike laws, and was not 
considered an official “work stoppage day.” But the push for the boycott spread 
so widely that it became hard to ignore.
Chris Rubesch, president of the Minnesota Nurses Association, a union 
representing more than 22,000 nurses and other health care workers, said he and 
other leaders discouraged members from missing work because of “no-strike” 
provisions in their contract. But he said the union also encouraged them not to 
participate in any other economic activity.
Mr. Anderson, the board member of the St. Paul Federation of Educators, said 
his union signed on after much debate, and asked members “to decide what that 
call to action means to them.”
“We decided it was now time to take a stand,” Mr. Anderson said. “It was time 
to boldly declare that enough is enough. We’re not going to take it anymore.”
Jazmine Ulloa, Pooja Salhotra, Kailyn Rhone, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, and 
Zachary A. Bohlman contributed reporting.
Chris Hippensteel is a reporter covering breaking news and a member of the 
2025-26 Times Fellowship class, a program for journalists early in their 
careers.
Talya Minsberg is a Times reporter covering breaking and developing news.
Maia Coleman is a reporter for The Times covering the New York Police 
Department and criminal justice in the New York area.
Unrest in Minnesota
Minnesota Inmates: The Trump administration said it would ease its immigration 
operation in Minnesota in exchange for broader access to inmates. Local leaders 
say they already cooperate significantly.
Center of Immigration Drama: Just outside Minneapolis, the Whipple Building 
houses offices, a detention center and a courthouse — and has become the home 
base for immigration agents and protesters alike.
Complicated Polling: Numerous surveys in recent weeks have addressed ICE and 
the aftermath of Renee Good’s shooting in Minneapolis. The results are more 
complicated than they might seem.
Detention of 5-Year-Old: A photo showed a boy with an oversized hat and 
Spider-Man backpack being held next to a vehicle as his father was detained by 
immigration authorities. Top Homeland Security officials said the child was 
being “well cared for” as he remains in a Texas detention center with his 
father.
Protest of Minnesota Pastor: The Justice Department said that it had arrested 
three of the demonstrators involved in interrupting a church service in St. 
Paul, Minn., to protest a pastor’s apparent work as an ICE official. The White 
House posted a digitally altered image showing one of the demonstrators crying 
as she was arrested. A previous version of the image, also posted by an 
official government account, showed her looking forward calmly.
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