(LOS ANGELES) Mayor Karen Bass and a coalition of city and community leaders on August 14, 2025 renewed their call for an immediate halt to what they describe as “reckless” and “discriminatory” federal immigration raids, saying the stepped-up operations are tearing families apart, straining public safety, and shaking the local economy. The push comes after weeks of large-scale enforcement actions across Los Angeles, new legal challenges from both the city and the Department of Justice, and a rare federal deployment of troops to support immigration operations.
City pushes back amid surge in enforcement

City officials say the pace and scope of federal immigration raids have grown sharply since June, with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) carrying out coordinated sweeps at workplaces and public spaces and, in some cases, at sites once treated as off-limits — including schools and hospitals.
On June 6, 2025, more than 100 people were detained in a single day, with hundreds more taken into custody in later operations. The escalation followed policy changes in January 2025 that ended prior limits on enforcement at “sensitive locations,” increasing fear among many mixed-status families who now skip clinic visits, school drop-offs, or even grocery trips.
Mayor Karen Bass responded with an executive directive in July 2025 ordering a whole-of-government approach. Under the directive:
- Every department must prepare for federal activity on city property and appoint an immigration affairs point person.
- A new LAPD working group was created to coordinate responses.
- City staff were directed to seek records from federal agencies about recent operations.
- The directive prioritizes help for families who lose a wage earner during a raid and requires departments to share clear, simple information with the public.
Key elements of the directive include:
– Preparedness plans for possible federal actions on city sites
– Department liaisons to help residents access city services
– Family support, including emergency aid and referrals
– An LAPD working group to coordinate citywide responses
– Records requests to federal agencies for transparency
Legal and economic stakes for Los Angeles
The clash over immigration enforcement is now in court on multiple fronts. The City of Los Angeles, backed by the ACLU, has filed suit claiming the tactics used in recent operations violate the Constitution and conflict with local sanctuary rules. Federal officials under President Trump reject those claims.
The Department of Justice has countersued the city, arguing that Los Angeles obstructs federal authority by limiting cooperation and restricting data sharing, in violation of the Constitution’s Supremacy Clause. A federal appeals court recently upheld a temporary block on indiscriminate stops and arrests in Southern California, but broader questions about local power and federal reach remain unresolved.
The economic stakes are sizable:
– Forecasts warn up to $275 billion in reduced economic activity in California if mass deportations continue.
– Potential losses of up to $23 billion in yearly tax revenue are cited.
– Researchers estimate undocumented workers pay about $37.3 billion in state and local taxes nationwide, including $8.5 billion in California.
Employers across construction, hospitality, and agriculture report labor shortages and rising costs, which could ripple to higher prices and slower rebuilding after disasters. Analysis by VisaVerge.com warns that rapid removals of long-time workers create lasting gaps that are hard to fill quickly, especially in jobs requiring experience and language skills across diverse sites.
Community impact, safety guidance, and official responses
City leaders say the raids, paired with the end of sensitive-location protections, have led many immigrants to avoid public spaces. Consequences include:
- Children kept home from school
- Missed health appointments
- Reduced reporting of domestic violence
- Increased evictions and sudden hardship after a breadwinner is detained
To blunt the shock, Mayor Bass announced direct cash assistance delivered through local immigrant rights groups. The cash cards, funded by private donors, offer “a couple hundred” dollars to families who need food, child care, or transport after a raid. While small, these grants are intended to cover urgent needs in the first days after a detention. City staff and nonprofit partners prioritize households with children, elderly relatives, or people with disabilities.
Protests against federal immigration raids have grown, led by labor unions and immigrant rights groups demanding releases from detention and a stop to new private detention facilities. Federal officials say they are enforcing the law and will continue to do so despite local opposition. U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli has stated that immigration enforcement will continue even if city leaders object.
In June 2025, the White House backed operations with a major show of force: 4,000 National Guard troops were federalized and 700 Marines were sent to the region to support ICE and respond to unrest tied to anti-ICE demonstrations.
Advocates and city liaisons continue to share simple safety guidance:
– If agents are at your door, they generally need a judge-signed warrant to enter non-public areas of a home or business.
– You have the right to remain silent and to ask for a lawyer.
– People may observe and record public arrests from a safe distance, without interfering.
For official information on immigration enforcement policy and operations, see U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Enforcement and Removal Operations page at https://www.ice.gov/ero.
Business, government coordination, and daily life
Even as city hall moves to fight in court and support residents, businesses are adjusting to the new reality:
- Restaurant owners report missed shifts as workers stay home out of fear.
- Construction crews say projects take longer, compounded by the loss of experienced workers who know safety rules and can communicate across languages.
- Contractors involved in post-wildfire recovery warn that schedule slips will push up costs and leave families waiting longer to rebuild.
The political divide is sharp. Mayor Bass calls the raids “unlawful and destabilizing” and urges the White House to end militarized operations in dense neighborhoods. Governor Gavin Newsom has visited affected communities and pressed for calm while sharing plain-language “know your rights” materials. Labor and immigrant groups demand releases and long-term legal relief. The Trump administration defends its approach and says local sanctuary laws do not shield people from federal action.
Inside city government, the new LAPD working group and department liaisons:
– Identify hotspots and share neighborhood reports
– Coordinate responses when children or vulnerable adults are left without a caregiver
– Track arrests and detentions to build the city’s legal case
– Compile requests for federal records to better map where and how raids take place
For families caught in the middle, the choices are painful. Parents weigh the risk of doing basic errands against the need to earn a paycheck. Teens translate legal letters for their elders. Small business owners decide whether to keep normal hours or close early to protect staff. Faith leaders open their halls for meetings, and volunteers help with child care when a parent is detained.
The coming weeks and months are likely to be decided in courtrooms as much as in city streets. The outcome could shape how far Washington can go when local governments adopt sanctuary rules and whether cities like Los Angeles can limit cooperation without facing penalties.
Mayor Karen Bass and community allies say they will keep pushing for:
1. A stop to the raids
2. More legal aid for affected families
3. Clear rules protecting children, patients, and worshipers at sensitive places
Federal officials, for their part, show no sign of pulling back.
This Article in a Nutshell
Mayor Karen Bass demanded an immediate halt on August 14, 2025 to federal raids destabilizing Los Angeles. City orders preparedness, LAPD coordination, records requests, and family aid. Legal battles with DOJ and the ACLU escalate. Economists warn up to $275 billion economic loss; communities face fear, protests, and urgent relief needs.