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Resistance to Trump's deportation frenzy gets organised
Unions, Black Lives Matter, migrant and student groups gathered in Los Angeles to build a ‘united resistance’ to the massive wave of deportations brought in under the Trump regime, reports MATTHEW HUNTER
RESIST AND REFUSE: An anti-deportations activist distributes materials calling for resistance to ICE raids

DOZENS of organisations and hundreds of activists gathered in historic East Los Angeles to convene the Emergency Southwest Summit Against Deportations. The mass coalition Legalisation For All initiated the two-day summit in the wake of Donald Trump’s continued attacks on the immigrant community.
 
The Department of Homeland Security told Newsweek that over 100,000 deportations have taken place already this year under Trump’s second term. For comparison, in Biden’s last year, he deported 271,000 people — the highest in about a decade. If these numbers are correct, Trump’s on his way to beating that decade-record number from last year. There have also been over 600 students who’ve had their visas revoked, mainly targeting Palestinian solidarity organisers.
 
Locally, it was reported on April 10 that two ICE agents had attempted to gain access to primary school students under the false pretence of conducting a wellness check. The school’s staff and educators denied them access and were taught Know-Your-Rights procedures by the summit co-organisers, Union del Barrio.
 
Other organisations featured were: co-organiser Centro CSO, United Teachers Los Angeles, Teamsters, Black Lives Matter Los Angeles, Oakland Alliance Against Police Repression, La Meza Nacional de Brown Berets, Silicon Valley Immigration Committee, Students for a Democratic Society, Committee for Solidarity with Peopl of El Salvador, Portland Contra la Deportaciones, Pierce County Immigration Community, Migrante, Proyecto Pastoral, Minnesota Immigrant Rights Action Committee, Eagle Pass Border Coalition, and more.
 
The summit featured guest speakers such as famed immigration rights activist Elvira Arellano, labour and immigrant rights organiser Angelica Reyes, and Luna Baez, the daughter of currently imprisoned Jennette Vizguerra.
 
There were also panel discussions on coalition building, grassroots organising, building solidarity, and organising the fight against the Trump administration. There were workshops on community defence tactics, developing rapid response networks, fighting deportations, working towards sanctuary status, and organising for May Day. Cultural performances in poetry readings by Viva Padilla, East Los Soul, and a Know-Your-Right skit performance by Teatro de Centro CSO also occurred.
 
The delegates from the organisations voted on two major resolutions. The first condemned the “anti-immigrant attacks and mass deportations” under Trump while calling for “united resistance” to “defend each other from all forms of state repression.” Ultimately, it calls for a commitment to “organising, educating, and mobilising in our communities” to develop “networks of resistance — community defence, rapid response, and grassroots organising to confront these attacks … ”
 
Finally, the second resolution called for a “powerful, united presence in the streets on May Day as we march for immigrant rights and workers’ dignity.” Finishing with “No human being is illegal! No more deportations! No more raids! Legalisation for All!”

This article appeared on Peoplesworld.org.

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