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Trump attempts to pivot in face of Minneapolis killing backlash
President Donald Trump sent his top border enforcer to Minneapolis on Monday and struck a conciliatory note in a bid to tamp down nationwide outrage over the second killing of a US citizen protesting militarized immigration raids this month.
The White House was scrambling as video of the latest shooting went viral, prompting street protests, criticism from former presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama and, increasingly, from within Trump's Republican Party.
Trump said that Tom Homan, his point man for border security, "will report directly to me."
Homan's dispatch appeared to be an acknowledgement that the administration has run into political damage, with polls showing a majority of Americans disapprove of the often brutal crackdown by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents.
Trump said he held a "very good" talk with Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, a Democrat whom he has repeatedly blamed for allowing illegal immigration and corruption.
"We, actually, seemed to be on a similar wavelength," Trump posted on social media, in a marked shift of tone.
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said that "nobody in the White House, including President Trump, wants to see people getting hurt or killed."
She also expressed sorrow for the death of Alex Jeffrey Pretti, an intensive care unit nurse who was gunned down Saturday at point blank range by immigration officers while protesting in Minneapolis. Earlier, top Trump officials had branded Pretti, 37, a "domestic terrorist."
However, there was no sign of Trump retreating from the hardline policy of sending heavily armed, masked and unidentified ICE agents into Democratic-run cities to track down people breaking immigration laws.
Leavitt said "this tragedy occurred as a result of a deliberate and hostile resistance by Democrat leaders in Minnesota."
- Ground zero -
Reducing illegal immigration is popular and helped Trump get elected in 2024. However daily videos of violent encounters between suspects and masked agents, as well as multiple reports of people being targeted on flimsy evidence, have helped send Trump's approval ratings plummeting.
Minneapolis has become ground zero in the turmoil.
A huge rally took place despite bitter cold on Friday to protest the raids and the shooting dead by an ICE agent of protester Renee Good, a 37-year-old mother of three on January 7. Like Pretti, she had been shot at close range and was a US citizen.
After Pretti was killed, more rallies erupted on the weekend in Minneapolis, New York and other major cities.
Opening a new front in the crisis, a federal judge in Minneapolis heard arguments Monday on whether the deployment of federal officers violates the state of Minnesota's sovereignty.
The judge, who was also considering a request to force federal officials to preserve evidence in the killing of Pretti, said she would rule quickly.
"If I had a burner in front of the front burner," she was quoted as saying in US media, "this would be on it."
Adding to pressure in Congress, Democrats are threatening to hold up funding for the US government unless immigration enforcement agencies are reformed.
- Republican pushback -
Trump's initial reaction to Pretti's killing was to suggest that the nurse had come intending to shoot at the police.
Pretti was carrying a pistol with him at the time but never removed it from its holster and had apparently already been disarmed when he was shot multiple times at point-blank range. He was licensed to carry a weapon.
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison on Sunday accused Trump of pushing a "flat-out insane" narrative.
Trump repeated the insinuation that Pretti was to blame when he told The Wall Street Journal on Sunday: "I don't like any shooting... but I don't like it when somebody goes into a protest and he's got a very powerful, fully loaded gun."
Monday's shift in White House messaging came as Republicans -- who only rarely criticize their 79-year-old party leader in public -- began to express alarm.
One of the most prominent cautions came from House Oversight Committee chairman James Comer, who signaled Sunday that federal agents should withdraw from Minneapolis -- an intervention that would normally be unheard of from a figure considered one of Trump's staunchest loyalists.
Republican Chris Madel sent shockwaves when he dropped out of the running for Minnesota's upcoming governor race to replace Walz, saying he could not remain a member of a party inflicting "retribution on the citizens of our state."
Even Texas Governor Greg Abbott, one of Trump's most dependable supporters, called for the federal authorities "to recalibrate."
P.Keller--VB