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Pritzker Condemns Trump’s Social Media Post as Protests Erupt in Chicago and Washington
Illinois Governor JB Pritzker has sharply criticized President Donald Trump after the president posted a controversial image on social media showing helicopters over Chicago with himself in a cowboy hat against a backdrop of flames. The post carried captions including, “I love the smell of deportations in the morning…,” “Chicago about to find out why it’s called the Department of War,” and “Chipocalypse Now.”
Pritzker denounced the message as inflammatory and dangerous. “This is not normal,” he said, accusing Trump of threatening “to go to war with an American city.” His remarks came as protests flared in both Chicago and Washington, D.C., over Trump’s order deploying federal immigration agents and National Guard troops to Democratic-led cities.
Federal authorities are reportedly preparing to launch a sweeping immigration enforcement operation in Chicago, sparking widespread anxiety in Latino communities. Many residents say they now carry documentation with them at all times, while some have reconsidered public celebrations of Mexican Independence Day. Local officials have pledged to challenge the federal crackdown in court, with city and state leaders vowing to sue the Trump administration.
Demonstrations over the president’s policies also grew in Washington, where thousands marched under the banner “END THE DC OCCUPATION.” Protesters walked more than two miles from Meridian Hill Park to Freedom Plaza near the White House, demanding an end to the federal takeover of law enforcement in the nation’s capital. It marked the fourth week of National Guard patrols and the most organized protest yet, with activists rallying under the slogan “We Are All D.C.”
Trump has defended the deployment, arguing it is necessary to curb crime and homelessness, though city officials counter that violent crime remains below levels recorded during his first term. Residents say the armed federal presence has created tension in neighborhoods and raised fears of authoritarian overreach.
Mark Fitzpatrick, a former U.S. diplomat who has lived in Washington for a decade, voiced alarm. “We don’t have our own senators or members of the House of Representatives, so we’re at the mercy of a dictator like this, a wanna-be dictator,” he said.
The latest moves follow earlier deployments to Los Angeles this summer, as Trump intensified immigration enforcement while seeking to project a tough-on-crime agenda. His decision to assert control over the D.C. police force, made under an emergency order, is set to expire on Wednesday.
With opposition mounting from local leaders and demonstrators, critics argue Trump’s measures represent an unprecedented assertion of federal power against U.S. cities — and a political gamble that has heightened tensions across the country.
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