Hundreds gather in San Jose, Oakland to protest ICE
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Hundreds gather in San Jose, Oakland to protest ICE

SAN JOSE — Hundreds of people gathered Monday evening in San Jose and Oakland to protest U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, as well as to stand in solidarity with protesters in Southern California.

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The demonstrations followed massive protests against ICE that erupted across Los Angeles over the weekend. On Saturday, President Donald Trump bypassed Governor Gavin Newsom to deploy 300 National Guard troops to assist ICE, a move that Newsom staunchly opposed. Leaders across the Bay Area decried the use of the military in response to the protests.

Earlier Monday, California Attorney General Rob Bonta confirmed plans to sue the federal government for deploying the California National Guard in Los Angeles.

The protests also came on the heels of an uptick in immigration enforcement in some parts of the Bay Area. In San Jose on Friday, about 50 protestors marched in response to several immigration arrests in the city in the prior week.

Attendees at Monday’s protest in San Jose held signs proclaiming “abolish ICE” and “immigrants make America great!” as they stood along Santa Clara Street, where they received honks of support. Some played songs such as “Fortunate Son” and tracks from “Hamilton,” while others waved American and California state flags.

San Jose City Councilmember Pamela Campos was one of several speakers who addressed the crowd.

“We are experiencing an attack on our community,” Campos said in a speech. “We will counter Trump’s lies with the truth about our immigrant communities. And the fact is, immigrant families are the hardest working taxpayers in our country.”

Campos implored the crowd to “lead with compassion.”

“We know that those in power will use any pretext for a violent escalation,” she said.

In East Oakland, about two dozen people gathered at MacArthur Boulevard and High Street, waving signs declaring “stop the coup” and “dump Trump.” It marked the latest installment of a weekly gathering of neighbors at the intersection who have protested against the Trump administration.

“I worry about authoritarianism,” said Lisa Claxton, 50, who has helped organize the weekly gathering. She voiced concerns that the president’s mobilization of military forces would lead to “trumping up violence,” all to eventually suppress dissent.

Back in San Jose, speaker after speaker urged attendees to do more than just protest.

“We have to make sure that we change the rules to the game,” said Santa Clara County Supervisor Sylvia Arenas, recalling her history as a daughter of immigrants and a resident of East Side San Jose.

“We have to make sure that we change the rules to the game,” Arenas said. “You have to go into City Hall … you have to go in: when you go in as a group you have so much power.”

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.