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The mayor of BroadView rejects the deployment of the National Guard in the midst of ice demonstrations

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The mayor of a small town outside Chicago insisted on the fact that his community did not want the national guard troops to be deployed in the region after weeks of demonstrators competing with the US immigration and customs application (ICE).

Katrina Thompson, the mayor of BroadView, a village with a population of less than 8,000 people just west of the city center of Chicago, held a press conference on the federal presence in the city on Tuesday, saying categorically: “We do not want them here”.

“We don’t need it,” said Thompson WLS-TV in an interview. “We can govern ourselves and we did it to this point.”

Thompson’s remarks are intervened after several suggestions by President Donald Trump that the Chicago Region could benefit from the troops of the National Guard. Trump even told the higher American military officers on Tuesday at the base of the Marine Quantico in Virginia that the National Guard would go to Chicago very soon “.

The mayor of Chicago says that “the unstable human being” must be “verified” on military use in American cities

The mayor of BroadView, Katrina Thompson, speaks to a presser

The mayor of BroadView, Katrina Thompson, responded to the presence of ice agents in her city in the Chicago region during a press conference on Tuesday. (Fox32 Chicago WFLD)

The Trump administration has already deployed the National Guard in cities such as Los Angeles and Washington, DC, to fight crime and help deportations.

Thompson said the demonstrators had been “peaceful” and mostly launched verbal insults against BroadView agents despite clashes with ice agents who have made several people arrested and charged with having attacked federal officers.

Ice demonstrators walking near tear gas

Federal agents pulled pepper balls and tear gas against demonstrators after some people tried to prevent a car from reaching a federal immigration application in BroadView, Illinois, Friday, September 26, 2025. (AP photo / Laura Bargfeld)

“It happens to me all the time, and I do not go out and I do not throw tear gas on people,” Thompson told the point of sale.

Hundreds of federal agents in Chicago exercise an operation targeting the members of suspect gangs of Tren of Aragua

Ice responded to Thompson in a statement on Tuesday, saying that the mayor “can either continue to be part of the problem, or choose to be part of the solution by ordering your police to enforce local prescriptions and work with us to withdraw violent offenders”.

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“The mayor Thompson distorts reality, pointing his finger in the wrong direction, while our officers protect his community – and others – against real threats, while faced with arrow violence against them, including in the BroadView establishment,” said Ice.

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