The president of the Minneapolis Federation of Educators has acknowledged that local elected officials are among participants in anti-ICE Signal chat groups organized in response to federal immigration enforcement efforts in Minneapolis and surrounding areas. Marcia Howard’s comments, made in a recent interview that aired on Al Jazeera last week, confirm that activists, union members and some public officeholders are involved in encrypted messaging networks aimed at “protecting neighbors” from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) actions.
What Marcia Howard Said
Marcia Howard — a longtime Minneapolis educator and activist who serves as president of the teachers union — told Al Jazeera that union members and community leaders use Signal chats to coordinate responses to ICE presence in their cities. When asked whether the activity is something to be ashamed of, she said, “Our bosses are in the Signal chats with us… Our elected officials are in the chats with us.”
Howard described these chat groups as part of community efforts to:
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Track the location of ICE and Border Patrol vehicles
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Check license plates and patrol neighborhoods
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Share real-time updates when enforcement operations are underway
She said that local community members — “nanas,” youth coaches and soccer parents — are among the many involved, and that teachers themselves have been participating in these actions to support community safety.
Context: Anti-ICE Activism and Enforcement in Minneapolis
The Signal chat groups are part of broader local activism against a heightened federal immigration enforcement campaign known as Operation Metro Surge. That operation has drawn protests, demonstrations and resistance efforts throughout Minneapolis and St. Paul, including calls for suspension of ICE actions and even general strikes.
Some activists see the chats as a way to alert neighbors and communities when ICE agents are in the area, particularly after high-profile confrontations and shootings involving federal officers. These encrypted networks have also drawn national scrutiny — including an FBI probe into some Signal chats over allegations of obstruction or potential threats — though officials emphasized that peaceful protest and coordination are constitutionally protected absent illegal conduct.
Elected Officials’ Involvement: What It Means
Howard’s revelation that elected officials are participating in the same encrypted chat groups as activists adds a new layer to the controversy surrounding local resistance to federal immigration operations. While many local lawmakers and leaders have publicly criticized ICE and called for limits on federal enforcement, direct involvement in activist communication groups signals a deeper embrace of community-led responses.
Some reports have connected other state officials to similar efforts, though those individuals — including Minnesota state representatives or aides — have denied operational roles or specific coordination in chat groups.
Reactions and Public Debate
Howard’s comments have sparked debate on multiple fronts:
Supporters of the union chief’s remarks argue that community members and local leaders are justified in monitoring and responding to federal actions they view as harmful. They say that citizen vigilance and organized communication are critical to protecting vulnerable residents and families in Minnesota’s immigrant communities.
Critics contend that elected officials’ involvement in activist chats — especially encrypted groups that monitor law enforcement movements — raises questions about appropriate boundaries between public office responsibilities and grassroots direct action. Some observers have raised concerns about legal liabilities or policy conflicts that may arise when public officials participate in efforts seen as opposing federal law enforcement.
Union and Education Community Perspectives
Howard also noted that teachers are taking active roles in these community responses, describing how they carry “whistles and our phones” to help ensure student safety when ICE agents operate nearby. She framed such involvement as part of educators’ broader commitment to protecting students and families in their neighborhoods.
At the same time, other educator groups in Minnesota have publicly called on ICE to stay away from schools so that children can learn without fear or disruption — underscoring how immigration enforcement has become intertwined with local educational concerns.
A Controversial Revelation in a Contentious Climate
The admission that elected officials are participating in anti-ICE Signal chat groups highlights how deeply intertwined local politics and grassroots activism have become in Minneapolis. As federal immigration enforcement operations continue to spark protests and community resistance, involvement of teachers, union leaders and public officeholders in encrypted communications has amplified both support for community solidarity and criticism from opponents.
Amid ongoing protests, federal inquiries into activist networks and local demands for policy change, Minneapolis remains a focal point of national attention over immigration, law enforcement and civic engagement.






