BREAKING: Minnesota Sees Largest General Strike in 70 Years as Protesters Demand “ICE Out for Good”
Today, Minnesota is witnessing what organizers are calling the largest general strike in the state in more than 70 years—a sweeping, coordinated action that has brought workers, students, faith leaders, and community groups together in a powerful show of resistance. At the heart of the strike is a single, uncompromising demand: Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) must leave Minnesota permanently.
Across Minneapolis, St. Paul, and surrounding cities, thousands of people have walked off their jobs, closed businesses, skipped classes, and filled the streets. Public transit slowed, storefronts went dark, and entire neighborhoods paused daily life to send a clear message to state and federal leaders. This is not a symbolic protest, organizers say, but an economic and social shutdown designed to force attention—and action.
The strike follows months of growing tension over expanded ICE operations in the region. Activists argue that increased enforcement has spread fear throughout immigrant communities, separating families and destabilizing neighborhoods. Many say the presence of ICE has made everyday life feel unsafe, even for legal residents and U.S. citizens who fear racial profiling and collateral damage.
“This is about human dignity,” one organizer said at a rally in downtown Minneapolis. “When entire communities live in fear, that is not public safety. That is state-sanctioned trauma.”
Labor unions have played a central role in mobilizing the strike, framing the issue as both a human rights and workers’ rights crisis. Union leaders argue that immigrant labor is deeply woven into Minnesota’s economy—from agriculture and construction to healthcare and food service—and that targeting these communities harms everyone. By withholding labor, they say, workers are demonstrating just how essential they are.
Faith leaders and educators have also joined the movement. Dozens of churches, mosques, and synagogues held prayer services before marching together, while some schools and universities canceled classes as students participated in walkouts. The message from these groups has been consistent: moral responsibility demands resistance.
Supporters of ICE counter that immigration laws must be enforced and warn that removing federal agencies sets a dangerous precedent. They argue that border security and immigration enforcement are matters of national sovereignty, not local sentiment. State and federal officials have urged calm, emphasizing the importance of lawful protest while cautioning against disruption to critical services.
But for those in the streets today, the disruption is the point.
Protesters say history shows that major change rarely comes without discomfort. They point to past labor movements and civil rights actions, many of which were initially condemned as radical or divisive, yet later recognized as necessary turning points.
Social media has amplified the strike’s impact far beyond Minnesota. Images of packed streets, closed workplaces, and handmade signs reading “ICE OUT” and “NO WORK, NO SCHOOL, NO FEAR” are spreading rapidly. The phrase “Raise your hand if you agree ✋” has become a rallying cry online, signaling solidarity across state lines.
Whether this general strike leads to immediate policy change remains uncertain. But one thing is clear: Minnesota has entered a historic moment. For supporters, today is proof that collective action still has power—and that ordinary people, united, can force the nation to confront uncomfortable questions about justice, safety, and who truly belongs.