sanctuary city

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What is a sanctuary city in the United States?

What historical event led to the association of sanctuary cities with immigration?

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How did U.S. Pres. Donald Trump’s administration respond to sanctuary cities during his second term?

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sanctuary city, municipality in the United States that limits local enforcement of federal immigration laws to protect undocumented immigrants. Such policies are established at a city, state, or county level and may be formally enforced or a de facto practice. Although there is no official definition of a sanctuary city, such cities typically enact one or more immigration-inclusive policies. There are more than 200 sanctuary jurisdictions (including cities, counties, and states) in the United States; New York City, Los Angeles, and Chicago are the largest sanctuary cities.

Policies

Sanctuary cities are politically contentious, and their existence often leads to debates on immigration policy, humanitarian concerns, public safety, resource allocation, and distribution of federal funding. U.S. courts generally hold that immigration enforcement is the responsibility of the federal government. In a sanctuary city, jurisdictions limit their cooperation with federal immigration officials but do not interfere with their work. Cases involving public safety, however, are treated differently.

Berkeley, California, was the first city to declare itself a sanctuary city, in 1971, and offered amnesty for U.S. Navy sailors seeking to avoid serving in the Vietnam War. Sanctuary cities became associated with immigration in the 1980s, when as many as one million immigrants fleeing civil wars arrived in the United States from Guatemala and El Salvador. The U.S. government declined to grant the immigrants asylum as political refugees; instead, the administration of Pres. Ronald Reagan classified them as economic migrants, a group that did not qualify for protected status. Estimates suggest that 97 percent of asylum applications made during this period were rejected. Religious groups and local governments came to the immigrants’ aid, and eventually entire cities, including Los Angeles, and states such as New Mexico and Wisconsin extended offers of protection in defiance of federal directives.

Sanctuary city policies aim to help immigrants integrate into society and seek to promote trust between immigrants and local law enforcement. In practice, this can include making multiple types of identification acceptable and available to immigrants, especially driver’s licenses; making all people eligible for bail regardless of immigration status; and offering U-visas, which are visas granted to victims of crime, to encourage reporting and public safety.

Police in these jurisdictions are prohibited from making arrests solely on the basis of immigration status. Law enforcement officials can decline to act as agents of the federal immigration authority, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). In addition, local government officials can choose not to comply with federal instructions to immediately detain arriving immigrants and, under local policies, cannot directly ask about a person’s immigration status. Municipalities can choose not to share immigration data with the federal government, and law enforcement officials can refuse requests from the government to detain immigrants while waiting for a federal immigration agency to take custody.

Political debate

Sanctuary cities became a point of much political contention in the 21st century, when crises in Latin America caused more than six million Venezuelans, along with a number of Guatemalans, Salvadorans, and Ecuadorans, to flee their homelands, constituting the largest displacement in recent Latin American history. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, in criticism of the policies set by the administration of U.S. Pres. Joe Biden, routed thousands of migrants to sanctuary cities including Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, and Denver, as well as New York City and Chicago starting in April 2022. Those cities were quickly overwhelmed by the unprecedented number of arrivals.

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In Chicago migrants were forced to sleep in close quarters at police stations during the winter, as all shelters were at capacity (Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot declared a state of emergency in May 2023). In January 2023 Biden backed a bill to allocate $1 billion to local governments to help with the costs of housing and feeding the influx of migrants, but the bill failed in the face of Republican opposition, forcing cities to cover costs. In New York this meant the city was responsible for providing more than $2 billion in housing costs alone in 2023 and 2024.

In addition to the cost of resources on local governments, critics of sanctuary cities highlight isolated cases of violent crimes committed by undocumented immigrants to oppose the existence of sanctuary cities. Sanctuary cities generally decrease by half the rate of deportations of immigrants with no criminal records. Research has also shown that the existence of sanctuary cities does not lead to increased crime in such jurisdictions nor does it prevent deportation of violent criminals. In several studies, immigration-friendly policies have been shown to correlate with reduced crime rates, higher median household incomes, lower rates of poverty and unemployment, and fewer cases of domestic abuse.

Trump presidential administration

About one million migrants, including Venezuelans, Salvadorans, Ukrainians, and Haitians, who arrived before July 31, 2023, were granted temporary protected status (a concept first introduced in 1990) on the basis that their homelands were deemed unsafe because of war, natural disasters, or other crises. However, U.S. Pres. Donald Trump indicated opposition to temporary protected status during his first term (2017–21) and moved to end the program for Haitian and Salvadoran migrants. During his second term in 2025 his administration swiftly removed temporary protected status for Venezuelan migrants, and ICE raids began to occur soon after in cities such as Chicago, Miami, and New York City. The president also instructed the Department of Justice to withhold federal funding from sanctuary cities. Several jurisdictions, including King county, Washington; Portland, Oregon; and San Francisco and Santa Clara counties in California sued. (Although Los Angeles is a sanctuary city, it did not join the lawsuit because the city needed federal funding to recover from wildfires.)

In February 2025 the Department of Justice sued Illinois, Chicago, and Cook county for their immigration-friendly policies such as Illinois’s Way Forward Act and Chicago’s Welcoming City ordinance. According to the lawsuit, such laws are “discriminatory” against the federal government and lead to greater difficulties in enforcing federal immigration laws.

Although sanctuary city status is normally based on immigration, in February 2025 Worcester, Massachusetts, declared itself to be a sanctuary city for transgender individuals. This came in the face of increased discrimination against transgender individuals by the Trump administration. Earlier that month, the president had issued an executive order titled “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports,” which aimed to ban transgender women from participating in women’s sports in an educational context (such as school sports).

Michele Metych