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Trump Attacks Oakland for Its Commitment to Protecting Immigrants Against Raids

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Oakland residents and others demonstrate March 7 when Attorney General Jeff Sessions spoke in Sacrament. Protesters said: “Sessions go home. We won’t be bullied.” Photo courtesy of Jean Quan on Facebook.

Local residents and community leaders are responding with redoubled determination after Mayor Libby Schaaf and the city have come under attack by President Trump, Attorney General Jeff Sessions and ICE Director Thomas Homan for opposing local ICE deportation raids and defending Oakland as a sanctuary city.

“Who would ever have thought we would see the day the president of the United States would be attacking institutions,” like the City of Oakland, the State of California and even the FBI and the CIA, said community activist Jose Dorado.

“It’s a real showdown,” he said. “There are certainly a number of sanctuary cities, and California is a sanctuary state, but we have made our sanctuary city resolution one of the strongest, if not the strongest, in the nation.”

Oakland’s resolution forbids the City of Oakland and the Oakland Police Department from cooperating or collaborating with ICE and also provides funding to support a rapid response legal team to go to locations where ICE raids are in progress.

The sanctuary city policy was adopted by the City Council with major community backing and the leadership of Councilmembers Rebecca Kaplan, Desley Brooks and Noel Gallo.

A resolution passed last year was ignored by the Oakland Police Department in August when it provided support for an ICE raid. Police Chief Anne Kirkpatrick and Mayor Schaaf defended the collaboration with ICE.

In response, the council passed a stronger and more clearly worded resolution prohibiting OPD from collaborating with ICE, including providing traffic control or logistical support for raids.

Retaliating against the strong council resolution and the intense criticism of the mayor and police chief for collaborating with ICE, some members of the council unsuccessfully attempted to remove Councilmember Brooks as head of the Public Safety Committee.

The Trump administration’s attacks on Mayor Schaaf began after she sent out a tweet Saturday, Feb. 27, warning the community of impending ICE raids.

“As Mayor of Oakland,” she wrote, “I am sharing this information publicly not to panic our residents, but to protect them.”

ICE Director Homan blasted Schaaf, saying her tweet enabled over 800 “criminals” to avoid capture.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions gave a speech in Sacramento criticizing California, singling out Oakland’s mayor.

“So, here’s my message for Mayor Schaaf: how dare you. How dare you needlessly endanger the lives of our law enforcement officers to promote a radical open borders agenda,” he said.

Escalating the attack and threatening reprisals, President Trump called Schaaf “a disgrace.”

“They had close to 1,000 people ready to be gotten, ready to be taken off the streets… they say 85 percent of them are criminals and had criminal records. And the mayor of Oakland went and warned them, scattered, so instead of taking in a thousand, they took a fraction of that.

“And it’s certainly something we are looking at with respect to her individually.”

Schaaf told the media she would be willing to go to jail to help protect Oakland residents against ICE raids.

The White House’s accusations against Schaaf and Oakland lost steam this week when a Northern California ICE spokesman resigned, saying he was not willing to parrot the false allegations.

“I quit because I didn’t want to perpetuate misleading facts,” James Schwab told the San Francisco Chronicle. “I asked them to change the information. I told them that the information was wrong, they asked me to deflect, and I didn’t agree with that. Then I took some time, and I quit.”

In Oakland, the attacks are backfiring. Like many other community members and activists, Dorado stands with Schaaf on this issue and defends her against the “Trumpists.”

“I don’t always agree with Libby Schaaf, but a whole lot of people are giving her a lot of props for (taking this stand),” he said.

Expressing mixed feelings, Claudine Tong wrote on Facebook that Schaaf “is getting so much good publicity from (this).”

“Too bad it won’t keep her from letting developers and gentrifiers take our homes or having Public Works destroy homeless people’s belongings and shelters while not providing the city services they are entitled to,” she wrote.

In a statement issued this week, Kaplan denounced the “lies” of the head of ICE, Sessions and Trump.

“They are not targeting dangerous criminals,” she said. “The administration is using an ancient tool of tyrants and bigots throughout history who seek to create fear of ‘the other’ in order to justify mistreatment of minority communities.”

“They are not upset about the ‘leaks,’” she said. “The feds pretend to be angry about the leak of internal confidential ICE information. However, in all their angry comments, they have not expressed any intention to or plan to find the leak.” Instead, they denounce “the person who received the leak, rather than whomever committed the leaking.”

Further, they gave their raids the name “Keep Safe,” said Kaplan, “but they are not about keeping people safe.”

Looking to the immediate future, School Board member Roseanne Torres told the Oakland Post the Oakland Unified School District is a sanctuary district, but more steps must be taken to protect Oakland parents and children who are living in fear that their families could be torn apart.

“Families are afraid,” she said. “We have to be very clear about how to get our children to school” when raids are threatened.

“We’re going this year to another level, “she said. Principals and school staff are asking parents how they will get their children to and from school if the parents are afraid to leave the house.

Parents have to face the question, she said: “Who is going to take care of your kids if you get picked up?”

“We’re living in a police state,” Torres continued. “There is no place to hide. We’re an example of what is coming in a lot of places.”

Arts and Culture

COMMENTARY: Black Music is the Sound of Black Freedom: Let Us Reclaim Both This Juneteenth

Black Music Month started when Black Music Association members Ed Wright, Kenny Gamble and his wife, journalist and radio host Dyanna Williams were able to persuade President Jimmy Carter to establish the observation on June 7, 1979.

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Robert Johnson (1911-1938) is thought of as the godfather of blues music, especially Delta blues. The 29 songs recorded by him during his short life have been of massive inspiration to guitarists and musicians over the last 80 years. Public domain photo.
Robert Johnson (1911-1938) is thought of as the godfather of blues music, especially Delta blues. The 29 songs recorded by him during his short life have been of massive inspiration to guitarists and musicians over the last 80 years. Public domain photo.

By Wanda Ravernell

Black Music Month and Juneteenth are inextricably linked – Black music is the sound of our freedom.

From the plaintive moans of the enslaved Africans’ ‘sorrow songs,’ to the fields of Civil War battle where Black soldiers picked up abandoned bugles, to the upright piano played in juke joints on Saturday night and churches come Sunday morning, our ancestors’ innovation in the face of want, fear, degradation, and hopelessness has yielded genres of music imitated ’round the world.

Black Music Month started when Black Music Association members Ed Wright, Kenny Gamble and his wife, journalist and radio host Dyanna Williams were able to persuade President Jimmy Carter to establish the observation on June 7, 1979.

In 2000, Congress made it official. In 2009, Pres. Barack Obama changed the name to African American Music Heritage Month and in 2023, Pres. Joe Biden changed it back to Black Music Month, two years after he declared Juneteenth a national holiday, the result of a movement led by Opal Lee.

Our ancestors battle for freedom over these last 400 years and the music that allowed them expression of their humanity deserved to be honored.

But we may be losing sight of the value of their sacrifices.

‘Sing a Song Full of the Faith That the Dark past Has Taught Us…’

Along with the long-known exploitation of Black musicians whose recordings were stolen by record companies, the commercialization of Juneteenth feels like another kind of theft.

I had never heard of Juneteenth until I moved to the Bay Area from my hometown of Philadelphia. I didn’t know it was one of many freedom festivals celebrated by descendants of enslaved people in the United States.

Emancipation Day was Jan. 1 in Pennsylvania, April 16 in Wash., D.C., May 20 in Florida, and Aug. 8 in Kentucky. But Juneteenth, June 19, has the most renown, known in Texas as the ‘colored peoples’ Fourth of July.’

It was marked by parades, beauty pageants, rodeos, backyard barbecues and church picnics.

Yes, church.

The formerly enslaved began the day praying in thanks for their freedom just as they had prayed for Jubilee – the day of freedom – when they had chains on their feet and hands. They ‘testified’ about their past suffering and how they had managed to overcome.

And they sang.

Although, we will not hold it this year, Omnira Institute’s Juneteenth Ritual of Remembrance recalled this part of Juneteenth with prayers in the languages of the African captives. In the middle of the ceremony, a soloist would lead us in singing “Many Thousand Gone” while we took turns reciting portions of the Emancipation Proclamation, the news of freedom that took more than two years to reach Texas – two months after the Civil War ended.

“Many Thousand Gone” was famously recorded by Black luminary Paul Robeson in 1947:

“No more auction block for me,

No more, no more

No more auction black for me

Many thousand gone.”

Other verses refer to the ‘pint of salt’ and the ‘driver’s lash,’ the realities of enslavement that they had survived.

‘Sing a Song Full of the Hope That the Present has Brought Us’

All of the genres of African American music have at their root songs like that, the essence being, as Stevie Wonder, wrote, “the joy inside our pain.” So Black music is not just music. It is our story, our history, our very strength.

During the Civil Rights Movement, which peaked 100 years after slavery ended, the people testified that it was the freedom songs – based on spirituals – that gave them the heart to march, face attack dogs, fire hoses, beatings, and shootouts with vigilantes.

The music reminded them that power was in the people. That music, our music, can do so again. We don’t have to accept the commodification of the products of our culture.

The power of those songs is showing a resurgence across the South as we battle again for the right to self-determination through the ballot box.

Those songs are the voices of our ancestors, voices forged in their blood, their sweat, their tears, joy and, above all, faith.  Those songs, those prayers live in our blood and our very breath.

This Juneteenth, let us reclaim those holy voices expressed in Black music for ourselves. It is our birthright. It can neither be bought nor sold.  No more. Never again.

Wanda Ravernell is the executive director of Omnira Institute, sponsor for 18 years of the Juneteenth Ritual of Remembrance and Oakland’s 11th Annual Black-Eyed Pea Festival, which will take place on Sept. 12.

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Activism

Oakland Post: Week of June 3 – 9, 2026

The printed Weekly Edition of the Oakland Post: Week of June 3 – 9, 2026

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Study: Waiting Lists for Child Care Assistance Nearly Doubled

BLACKPRESS USA NEWSWIRE — “Since the expiration of tens of billions of dollars in federal child care funding in 2023 and 2024, an already fragile child care system has been pushed even closer to the brink.”
The post Study: Waiting Lists for Child Care Assistance Nearly Doubled appeared first on BlackPressUSA.

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By National Women’s Law Center

The National Women’s Law Center released its annual State Child Care Assistance Policies report, finding that the number of children placed on waiting lists for federally funded child care assistance nearly doubled between 2024 and 2025 — and that number has only continued to grow.

The report serves as a key resource for state lawmakers, advocates, and policymakers by tracking state child care assistance policies and identifying where states are strengthening support for families and early educators — or falling behind.

“This deeply troubling increase in the number of children on child care waiting lists is the result of a failure to invest in this crucial sector,” said Karen Schulman, senior director of state child care policy and author of the report. “Since the expiration of tens of billions of dollars in federal child care funding in 2023 and 2024, an already fragile child care system has been pushed even closer to the brink.”

Key findings in the report related to waiting lists for child care assistance include:

• 17 states had waiting lists or a freeze on intake for child care assistance in February 2025, up from 13 states in February 2024.

• Approximately 106,700 children nationwide were added to waiting lists between February 2024 and February 2025, bringing the total to 225,500 children in February 2025 — a 90 percent increase compared to February 2024.

• The numbers climbed even further between February 2025 and summer/fall 2025, with more than 175,000 additional children added to state waiting lists in just a few months — a 78 percent increase.

• At least seven states newly began placing families on waiting lists or freezing intake, while at least 10 additional states saw their waiting lists grow, after February 2025.

The report also includes state-by-state data on key child care assistance policies, including income eligibility limits, parent copayments, provider payment rates, and eligibility policies for parents searching for work.

Click the link to learn more: Warning Signs: State Child Care Assistance Policies 2025.

The post Study: Waiting Lists for Child Care Assistance Nearly Doubled appeared first on BlackPressUSA.

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