US businesses break their silence after latest Minnesota ICE shooting
Minnesota shooting: Corporate leaders in Minnesota are breaking their silence on immigration enforcement after federal agents fatally shot a protester. Major CEOs have called for de-escalation, marking a significant shift in public opinion. This c...

"Even though I wish the letter was stronger, I think it's an important signal that Operation Metro Surge is losing its social acceptance," said Jamie Long, a top-ranked Democratic leader in the Minnesota House of Representatives.
Several Minnesota companies have been working with the Washington-based lobbying group the Business Roundtable to defuse the situation, sources familiar with the efforts told Reuters. In a statement, the Business Roundtable said it supported the calls by those leaders to "de-escalate the situation in Minneapolis." In signs of a possible thaw, Trump and Minnesota Governor Tim Walz spoke Monday about reducing tensions.
Trump has argued the militarized operations are necessary to remove criminals from the U.S., but many of those arrested were picked up solely for possible civil immigration violations - the legal equivalent to a traffic violation.
CEOs of Minnesota-based companies are planning additional meetings this week with federal officials to discuss what a resolution would look like, said a source familiar with the matter, who was not authorized to speak with media. He said the meetings have taken on more urgency and importance since the killing of Pretti.
TARGET WEIGHS IN
Incoming Target CEO Michael Fiddelke weighed in with a video to employees on Monday "as a leader of this hometown company" to acknowledge how the activity was affecting Target and the city. Neither the video nor the CEO letter, which he also signed, mentioned Trump, ICE, Pretti or Renee Good, a 37-year-old mother who was fatally shot by an immigration agent in Minneapolis on January 7."The violence and loss of life in our community is incredibly painful. What's happening affects us not just as a company, but as people, as neighbors, friends and family members within Target," Fiddelke said in the video, the transcript of which was shared with Reuters. Target has faced protests after an incident at a store in a Minneapolis suburb, where two U.S. citizens were detained, including a 17-year-old employee, and separately for allowing ICE agents to use its parking lots and bathrooms.
State lawmakers say they have urged business leaders to speak out. Long said he spoke with representatives from "at least four or five" big companies, and said executives told him ICE's actions have hurt sales, but that until now they have been afraid to speak up. That stood in contrast to numerous small businesses displaying "no ICE" signs and souring public mood. Trump's rating on immigration fell to a record low of 39% in the most recent Reuters poll.
"I think they realized their silence was no longer acceptable. I think they understand the harm this is doing to our state and the public," Long said.
GOOD FAVOUR
Business leaders have cozied up to the White House in hopes of avoiding conflict with Trump, who is not shy about attacking corporate titans from Intel to Walmart to JPMorgan, most recently filing a $5 billion lawsuit against the latter and its chief executive Jamie Dimon. Even with the recent remarks, leading business executives are still trying to stay in good favor with Trump. On the same day of Pretti's shooting, several executives attended a private White House screening of a new film documenting the life of first lady Melania Trump, including Amazon's CEO, Andy Jassy, and General Electric CEO Larry Culp."Some business leaders, of course, are showing more courage-but it takes coordinated, collective action to stand up for good government values," said Cary Coglianese, professor of law and political science at the University of Pennsylvania. "We're likely to need to see a rallying or cascading of opposition, so that it lowers the costs of being seen as opposing the administration."
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