The mayor of Chicago signs the order with Blueprint for having fought a repression of a potential Trump

The mayor of Chicago, Brandon Johnson, signed a decree on Saturday to limit the power of federal officers of the application of the laws and troops of the National Guard who, according to President Donald Trump, had threatened to deploy in Illinois.
“We find ourselves in a position where we must take immediate and drastic measures to protect our people from federal surpassing,” said Johnson, a democrat at a press conference.
One of the main points of the order, said Johnson, was to ask the city’s law service to use “each legal mechanism” to try to stop Trump’s potential plan.
Johnson later added that he would use “every tool that is available to us, and which includes the courts”.
“It is an area in which at least there is a semblance of check and balance in this country,” he said.
The decree also includes a litany of other directives, said Johnson, in particular by clarifying the actions that the Chicago police can take to help the federal police and prohibit them from covering their face or logo of the police service on their uniforms.
“This order says that the Chicago police service will not collaborate with military personnel on police patrols or the application of civil immigration. We will not have our police officers, who work hard every day to reduce crime, deputy to make traffic stops and control points for the president,” said Johnson at the press conference.
Johnson’s decision comes as the president has already deployed federal troops and police in Washington, DC, and as he has increasingly threatened to do the same in other major American cities, such as Baltimore.
Until now, most Democratic officials have rejected Trump’s threats to send troops to American cities on Thursday, with more than a dozen Democratic governors publishing a declaration on Thursday condemning the actions of the president.
“Whether it is Illinois, Maryland and New York or another State tomorrow, the threats and efforts of the president to deploy the national guard of a state without demand and consent of the governor of this State is an alarming abuse of power, ineffective, and undermines the mission of our soldiers,” the governors said in the press release. “This chaotic federal interference in the National Guard of our States must end.”
Meanwhile, in Washington, mayor Muriel Bowser said earlier this week that the federal wave had reduced crime, but the presence of immigration officers and national guard troops did not work.
“What we know is not to work is a break in trust between the police and the community, in particular with the new federal partners of our community,” Bowser told journalists last week. “We know that having masked ice agents in the community did not work, and the national guards of other states were not an effective use of these resources.”
Trump has not announced his intention to send federal troops to the application of laws or the National Guard to Chicago, but the Washington Post reported earlier this month that the Pentagon was deeply involved in planning a military deployment in the city.
Earlier this week, NBC News reported that federal authorities planned to set up agents in Chicago next week to accelerate unauthorized immigrant arrests.
Johnson said on Saturday that the city had “received credible reports that we have days, not weeks, before our cities saw a certain type of activity militarized by the federal government”.
“We do not know what exactly it will be like. We can see the application of militarized immigration. We can also see the troops of the National Guard. We can even see military and armed vehicles in active service in our streets,” added Johnson.
The White House spokesman Abigail Jackson responded to Johnson’s announcement on Saturday, accusing the mayor of having “Trump’s disturbance syndrome”.
“If these democrats focused on repairing crime in their own cities instead of making advertising waterfalls to criticize the president, their communities would be much safer. Cross on crime should not be a partisan question, but Democrats suffering from TDS try to make it a” jackson, adding: “They had to listen to the comrade Muriel Bowser who recently celebrated the administration of the administration of Trump in the success of the Trump administration in the success of Trump’s administration in Down Crime in Washington. “
Friday, Trump Border Czar Tom Homan told Fox News that the administration was looking for action in Chicago.
“Chicago arrives, with all the other cities in the sanctuary,” said Homan. “President Trump is engaged on which we are going to concentrate and prioritize the sanctuary cities because this is where the problem is.”
“Make yourself away, because we are going to do it,” said Homan later when he asked about the potential decline in local officials.
Earlier this month, the president deployed troops of the National Guard and federal laws of the application of laws in Washington, DC, in what he called an effort to fight crime. Federal troops and officials have deployed with the metropolitan police service in several regions of the national capital.
Until now, he has only deployed federal officers and national guard troops in Washington as part of his plan to combat crime declared, although earlier this year, Trump Federalized the California National Guard, despite the opposition of Governor Gavin Newsom, D-Calif., Sending troops to Los Angeles to stifle the actions of the actions of the application administration.
Earlier this week, during an event at La Crosse, in Wisconsin, Vice-President JD Vance spoke of the president’s plans to send troops to other American cities, telling the crowd that he did not expect Trump to “force” the troops to the governors and mayors who did not want them.
“What the president said is that, very simply, we want the governors and mayors to ask for help,” said Vance, adding later: “The President of the United States is not going there to force this on no one, although we think we have the legal right to clean the streets of America if we want it. But what the president said is, why don’t you know?”
The vice-president then referred to Chicago in particular, saying to the participants: “We are not too far from Chicago. Chicago had a lot of crime problems. Why do you have mayors and governors who are more angry than Donald Trump offers to help them that this is not the fact that their own residents are carjacks and murdered in the streets?




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