Boston tells Trump to beat the sand on his mass deportation plot

Boston leaders rejected in rejecting the request of the Ministry of Justice ordering the City to comply with the mass deportation plans of Donald Trump, part of the continuous attack of the administration against cities with large minority populations and democratic leadership.
Attorney General Pam Bondi sent a letter At 32 cities last week demanding respect for federal immigration policies and ordering them to stop operating as sanctuaries for migrant communities.
“Last week, Boston received a letter from AG Bondi threatening to prosecute the officials and retain funds unless we cooperate in the realization of mass deportations”, the mayor of Boston Michelle Wu wrote on social networks on Tuesday.
“The United States Attorney General asked for an answer by today, so here is: stop attacking our cities to hide the failures of your administration,” said Wu.
In a letter Sent to Bondi, Wu noted that the threat of retaining funds is “illegal” and said that threats and continuous actions against the city are evidence that “the Trump administration seeks to divide, isolate and intimidate our cities, and to fear the Americans.”
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Wu explained that Boston is “the most surest American city in America”, refuting the crime crime of crime that Trump and his team have often invoked as an excuse for discriminatory anti-immigrant policies. The mayor also explained that the provisions of the Constitution on the local government and the police are “the direct result of the attempted coercion of Boston by an inexplicable and distant monarch, and the refusal of this city to bow to tyranny.”
The mayor ended with a strong Beantown style reprimand.
“On behalf of the people of Boston, and in solidarity with cities and communities targeted by this federal administration for our refusal to bow to unconstitutional threats and illegal coercion, we affirm our support for each other and for our democracy,” said Wu. “Boston will never decide to be a lighthouse and a house for everyone.”
Democratic Senator Ed Markey of Massachusetts held a press conference Tuesday in response to the request and was also resolved.
“The 10th amendment prohibits the president of States and Cities of strong armaments to use their own money and the police to make Trump’s terror agenda,” said Markey.
The senator accused Trump of wanting Boston and Wu “to bow before his dream of absolute power”, but promised that “Boston will not bow”.
Likewise, Oregon Governor Tina Kotek Said Monday that she would fight the orders of the Doj.
“Threats like this undermine our values and our right to govern ourselves. We will not be intimidated to do the work of the federal government of immigration,” she said in a statement.
The administration has also tried to put pressure on other cities to protect migrants, including a suit In July against New York and Mayor Eric Adams. Trump also deployed the National Guard to Los Angeles in June On the objections of Mayor Karen Bass and Governor Gavin Newsom as part of a strategy to increase deportations in the city.
Trump has also deployed Federal agents of the application of laws and the National Guard in Washington, DC, as part of its pressure campaign, falsely invoking an nonexistent increase in crime as an excuse for its authoritarian actions.
Wu and Markey and the rest of Boston management now Join other Democratic leaders Through the country that has started to reject seriously against Trump’s last takeover.