Threat of immigration raids turns Chicago hub into ghost town

(Bloomberg) — The second busiest retail corridor in Chicago is typically a bustling area dotted with taquerias and Mexican grocery stores in the southwestern part of the city. By Monday afternoon it had turned into a ghost town.

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Word had gotten out over the weekend that the city could be the target of potential immigration raids after President Donald Trump took office, spreading anxiety among residents and business owners alike. Trump’s inauguration speech and boasts of cracking down on migrants only heightened the fear, while the frigid weather also kept people indoors.

Foot traffic at the 2-mile stretch of 26th Street in the Little Village neighborhood plunged — by some measures, the decline had hit the 50%-mark, according to Jennifer Aguilar, who heads the local chamber of commerce and spoke to a number of the 400 or so businesses in the area.

“It’s going to be disastrous,” Aguilar said in an interview. “If raids happen and people are too afraid to go out, it’s going to be an impact that’s going to last for years.”

A street in Little Village in Chicago. (Miranda Davis/Bloomberg)
A street in Little Village in Chicago. (Miranda Davis/Bloomberg)

Trump moved quickly on Monday to fulfill campaign pledges after his inauguration speech, announcing measures to end birthright citizenship and mobilize troops to step up border enforcement. He shut down the CBP One app, used by migrants to cross the border and ask for asylum, dashing the hopes of many waiting in Mexico for appointments with US authorities.

It all came three days after the Wall Street Journal reported Trump’s team was planning large Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids in Chicago starting on Tuesday — even though Border Czar Tom Homan later tried to downplay it, saying he was reviewing the plans.

The third-largest US city has long been a punching bag for Trump. But Chicago has been particularly on his radar after taking in tens of thousands of migrants during Joe Biden’s presidency, many bused from Texas by Governor Greg Abbott to sanctuary cities run by Democrats.

Midwest’s Mexico

Little Village, known as the “Mexico of the Midwest,” is located southwest of Chicago’s main business district. The area brings more tax revenue to City Hall than any other retail stretch other than the Magnificent Mile, the downtown shopping street that features luxury stores including Saks Fifth Avenue, Rolex and Burberry (BRBY.L, BURBY).