您现在的位置是:风核传媒 > 知识
Twin Cities restaurants compare life amid ICE raids to era of COVID pandemic
风核传媒2026-01-30 01:17:20【知识】4人已围观
简介Facebook TwitterThreads FlipboardCommentsPrintEmailAdd Fox News on GoogleNick
- Threads
- Comments
- Add Fox News on Google
Nick Sortor on the Ground as Anti-ICE Protests Spiral in Minnesota | Will Cain Country
Independent Journalist Nick Sortor shares firsthand experience covering violent anti-ICE protests in Minnesota. Plus, Barstool's Kayce Smith breaks down a big call against the Bills over the weekend & predicts tonight's National Championship game.
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!Restaurants in the Twin Cities area have sounded off that the ICE raids to enforce immigration law have put a strain on their businesses.
The Minnesota Star Tribune interviewed a variety of restaurateurs in the Twin Cities about how their businesses have been impacted by ICE under President Donald Trump. Mass deportations and enforcement of American immigration law have been some of Trump's most consistent flagship policies, but Latin-American and Somali business owners are not pleased.
"As immigration enforcement activity increases across the Twin Cities and the suburbs, food businesses are adjusting, making visible changes such as locking doors to screen customers before entry, cutting hours, switching to takeout-only service, temporarily closing and consolidating space. Many restaurants are operating short-staffed, with owners taking on multiple roles simply to keep things going," the Star Tribune reported.
Rolando Diaz, the owner of Marna’s Eatery and Lounge in Robbinsdale, noted that his restaurant is feeling the strain of current events. His restaurant is one of many that has become short-staffed because many employees are reportedly afraid to come to work for fear of being caught by immigration enforcement efforts.
WHITE HOUSE SAYS WALZ, FREY INCITED CHAOS AFTER ANTI-ICE MOB STORMS MINNEAPOLIS CHURCH

Deporting illegal immigrants and enforcing the border has been a flagship campaign promise of President Trump since he first announced his candidacy in 2015. (Christopher Dilts/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
"I’m a really positive guy, but I’m also very realistic," Diaz told the local news outlet, noting that ICE’s efforts in the area are "not something that’s gonna be done in a week, so we’re just preparing for the hit now."
"During COVID, people were afraid to go out because they were afraid to get sick and die," he noted. "Now they’re afraid to get out of the house and never come back to it."
Another restaurant owner, Miguel Lopez of the Homi Restaurant on University Avenue in St. Paul, offered a similarly grim comparison, saying, "We are pretty much back to COVID."
"I’ve had customers and friends that have been stopped on their way here and asked for papers," he told the local news outlet. "As a business, we’re hurting."
According to the Star Tribune, Venezuelan-born restaurateur Soleil Ramirez, the owner of Crasqui, "stopped taking walk-ins after a recent incident in which Ramirez said a man who identified himself as an ICE agent dined at the restaurant. Community members arrived for support and stayed until closing."
NOEM HAMMERS WALZ, FREY FOR IGNORING 1,360 ICE DETAINERS FOR CRIMINAL ILLEGAL ALIENS

President Donald Trump's use of ICE has been criticized as excessive by people on the political left, and insufficient by many on the political right. (Getty Images)
She noted that as an immigrant, she needed to train family members to run the restaurant in case she is detained.
"I need to have a plan B as a business person," she said. "But also as a human."
ICE enforcement has impacted other cultures' businesses as well.
"At Albi Kitchen on the edge of downtown Minneapolis, owner Fardowsa Abdul Ali said her colorful cafe with Somali sweets and sambusas was already struggling, ever since a viral video about a nearby daycare showed images of her business," the local news outlet reported, later adding that she has faced harassment on her phone as a result of the video.
"I really lost a lot of customers," Ali said. "They don’t come here."
CLICK HERE FOR MORE COVERAGE OF MEDIA AND CULTURE

Many of President Donald Trump's critics on the left say that ICE is arresting illegal immigrants who have committed no crime other than illegally immigrating to the United States. (Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
She said she has considered hiring security for the café but said she can’t afford it.
"I don’t feel safe, to be honest," Ali said. "I came to this country to be safe, not scared."
很赞哦!(325)
上一篇: 140平米装修多少钱 房子装修的注意事项
下一篇: 早春清肺补血的好粥:胡萝卜鸭腿粥
站长推荐
友情链接
- 43岁超模富永爱宣布怀孕 将与39岁演员山本一贤迎首胎
- Washington Post calls for welfare reform after Minnesota fraud scandal
- 与宝武水务举行工作会谈
- 豪横!云南玉昆官宣10名球员加盟 多位前国脚+两外援
- "นิพิฏฐ์"ชี้การป้องกันซื้อสิทธิขายเสียงต้องเริ่มจาก ขรก.
- 洛伊的移动要塞咆哮机械天使打法分享
- 日本多地发生杀人未遂、报复社会案件,我驻日使馆提醒→
- 魔幻颜色 铁甲《快打西游》八卦炉弄法分析
- 挥缰纵马,蹄踏落花:2020第六届梦想杯青少年马术公开赛圆满落幕
- 揭盖式垃圾桶优缺点是什么?
- 四年级状物作文:奶奶的花布袋
- 湖北卫视聚焦膜技术典型项目
- “2016中国书画总评榜暨中国影响力书画500强” 获奖名单公示
- 《工人日报》:一张净水膜何以成功抢占大市场?
- 阿斯顿·马丁F1车队与《玩具总动员》系列达成全新合作
- 我的世界珍妮slipperyt网站原版视频完整版
- 儿歌左手右手歌曲歌词
- 特朗普称不排除与委内瑞拉开战可能性
- 国台办发言人陈斌华答记者问
- 2026考研今开启,343万名考生赴考!






