Quantcast
Wednesday, February 5, 2025

‘Day Without Immigrants’ Flops as Many Realize They Are Too Expendable to Protest

'This is only hurting our own community...'

(Headline USA) Several businesses from day cares to grocery stores and hair salons closed Monday across the U.S. in a loosely organized day of protest against President Donald Trump’s immigration policies.

But instead, the failed effort might perversely have helped proponents of federal immigration-law enforcement in their effort to underscore just how expendable illegal-immigrant workers—millions of whom were let in under the Biden administration’s open-border policies—actually were.

Participation in the “day without immigrants” faced headwinds from employees and business owners who said they need the income—especially as rumors of widespread raids, often false, are leaving many illegal immigrants afraid to venture outside.

President Donald Trump and his border czar, Tom Homan, have indicated that those gainfully employed and contributing to their communities faced little threat of deportation as the new administration focus its efforts primarily on violent criminals, drug cartels, street gangs and those who may be exploiting America’s generosity without giving back anything.

Nonetheless, Noel Xavier, organizing director for the North Atlantic States Regional Council of Carpenters, said that while it was important to remind the country of the value illegals brought to their communities, many workers couldn’t afford to take a day off.

“If I don’t go to work today, that’s one day less that I have, you know, to be able to pay for my next rent,” Xavier said of the prevailing sentiment among the workers he organizes. “I didn’t see this big rallying around being able to do that, or having the luxury to be able to do that.”

Those most likely impacted by this week’s protest, ironically, were sanctuary cities where illegals were preaching to the choir.

Jaime di Paulo, president of the Illinois Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, noted that small restaurants and retailers in Chicago’s biggest Latino neighborhoods closed, but most major employers as well as those in construction and other industries were operating normally.

“This is only hurting our own community,” he said.

In Chicago, as in San Diego, school districts said some students and families were participating in Monday’s protest, forgoing the free education that they came to America to receive in the first place.

“If we don’t have immigrants, we don’t have anything work around here,” claimed Toro, who is from Puerto Rico. “If we’re mute, we’re in silence, then they’re going to do whatever they want.”

El Burrito Mercado, which boomed from a small Latino market in the 1970s to one of the most widely recognized restaurant, catering and grocery businesses in St. Paul, Minnesota, shut for the whole day in 2017—when the latest major such event was held at the beginning of the first Trump administration.

But on Monday, it stayed open for a few hours with a skeleton crew, said co-owner Milissa Silva.

Her parents emigrated from Mexico, and most of the 90 employees have Mexican roots. But many staffers expressed concern about losing a work day and about depriving people in the neighborhood of access to groceries.

Similarly, the Spanish-immersion day care provider Tierra Encantada kept its 14 locations open. But many parents decided to keep their children home Monday in solidarity with the mostly first and second-generation immigrant workforce, said CEO Kristen Denzer.

Families—most of them not immigrants—pulled some 450 children from day care and preschool, about 70% of those enrolled in Minnesota alone, where most of the organization’s centers are, Denzer said. Several staffers who had been on the fence decided to take the day after the show of support.

In Utah, several Latino-owned stores, restaurants and supermarkets closed their doors.

“The movement today, it’s more about being compassionate,” said state Sen. Luz Escamilla, a Democrat and Senate minority leader. “A lot of companies and communities are coming together in the state just to raise awareness of how much this has created a fear.”

Asked about the day of protest at his Monday media availability, Utah Senate President Stuart Adams, a Republican, defended Trump’s immigration policies and said law-abiding immigrants should have nothing to worry about.

“The only people that are being talked about being deported [are] those that are criminals, those that are on probation, those bad people who have committed difficult crimes,” Adams said.

While immigration enforcement officers continue to target for deportation migrants considered public safety and national security threats, a big change from the Biden administration is that officers can now arrest people without legal status if they run across them during operations.

Adapted from reporting by the Associated Press

Copyright 2024. No part of this site may be reproduced in whole or in part in any manner other than RSS without the permission of the copyright owner. Distribution via RSS is subject to our RSS Terms of Service and is strictly enforced. To inquire about licensing our content, use the contact form at https://headlineusa.com/advertising.
- Advertisement -

TRENDING NOW

TRENDING NOW