End of Minnesota Immigration Enforcement Surge: Federal Pullback and Aftermath
The Trump administration ends Minnesota's immigration enforcement operation after protests and legal challenges as authorities coordinate withdrawal.
Jacob Frey, born July 23, 1981, is an American politician, lawyer, and the 48th mayor of Minneapolis, Minnesota, serving since January 2, 2018.[1][3][4] A member of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party, he previously represented Ward 3 on the Minneapolis City Council from 2014 to 2018 after winning election in 2013.[1][2][3] Raised in northern Virginia, Frey graduated with a government degree before attending Villanova University Law School, where he became a competitive long-distance runner and developed interests in social justice and civil rights.[5][6] As an attorney specializing in employment and civil rights, Frey co-founded the Big Gay Race in 2011 to support marriage equality and advocated for homeless tenants in North Minneapolis, earning the city's inaugural Martin Luther King, Jr. Award in 2012.[2][6] On the council, he focused on affordable housing, small business growth, neighborhood improvements, and expanding early voting, increasing sites from one to five before 2016.[1][3][7] Elected mayor in 2017 at age 36—making him one of the city's youngest and its second Jewish mayor—Frey was reelected in 2021 and reportedly secured a third term in 2025.[1][2][3][5] His administration prioritizes affordable housing (with production up 8.5 times), community-police relations (including crisis response expansion and use-of-force revisions), climate action, inclusive economic growth, and governance.[1][2][4] Key achievements include the Stable Homes Stable Schools program aiding thousands of students, seven Cultural Districts, the Ownership and Opportunity Fund for entrepreneurs of color, downtown revitalization with strong post-pandemic recovery, and a new city government structure approved in 2021 and enacted in 2022 for better efficiency.[1][2] Frey lives in Northeast Minneapolis with his wife, Sarah Clarke, daughter Frida (born 2020), and anticipates a second child.[1][7] His leadership remains central to Minneapolis's ongoing housing, equity, and recovery efforts.[1][2]
The Trump administration ends Minnesota's immigration enforcement operation after protests and legal challenges as authorities coordinate withdrawal.
Jacob Frey wins a third term as Minneapolis mayor, securing reelection after ranked-choice voting.