The knock on the door is coming.
In Maine, families are sleeping in their clothes, phones fully charged, lawyers on speed dial.
Federal agents call it “Operation Catch of the Day.”
Critics call it something closer to a purge.
And as Trump’s DHS storms cities like Portland and Lewiston, the state’s quiet streets are turning into front lines, leav… Continues…
In neighborhoods from Portland’s crowded apartments
to Lewiston’s aging mill blocks, the impact is immediate and intimate.
Parents whisper contingency plans over kitchen tables.
Children scan unfamiliar cars outside their homes.
While ICE insists it is targeting only those with serious criminal convictions,
the shadow it casts falls on everyone who looks or sounds “foreign,”
regardless of status or record. Advocates race to organize hotlines and emergency legal clinics,
trying to build a fragile shield against a system built for speed, not mercy.
At the same time, Maine’s leaders are walking a political tightrope.
Governor Janet Mills urges calm and distance from the operation,
even as federal officials accuse her of sheltering dangerous offenders.
Portland’s mayor denounces the raids as disproportional,
but his city cannot stop them.
What unfolds now in Maine is more than an operation;
it is a test of how far Washington will go—and how much
fear a democracy is willing to
tolerate in the name of securitization.