what will the national guard do in minneapolis
The Minnesota National Guard in Minneapolis is being used in a limited, support role: helping secure specific locations, support overstretched local law enforcement, and maintain public safety and space for peaceful protest, not to run general immigration raids or broad federal operations.
What the Guard is actually doing in Minneapolis
From the latest city and state statements, here is how officials describe the Guard’s mission:
- Supporting Minneapolis Police Department (MPD) and Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office because local resources are stretched thin after large federal immigration operations and protests in the city.
- Helping protect community safety around the site where a Minneapolis resident, Alex Pretti, was fatally shot by federal agents near 26th Street and Nicollet Avenue, and other posts “as needed.”
- Assisting with a vehicle perimeter around the shooting scene: keeping most vehicles out of a defined zone (Franklin Ave. to 28th St., Pillsbury Ave. to I‑35W) except for local residential traffic.
- Providing security support at the B.H. Whipple Federal Building , where additional staff are needed to cover shifts during protests and heightened tensions.
- Augmenting state and local agencies with traffic control and public order duties so regular officers can keep responding to 911 calls across the city.
Officials emphasize that the Guard’s stated mission is to “preserve life, protect property, and ensure Minnesotans can safely exercise their First Amendment rights,” especially as protests continue.
Who’s in charge and what they won’t do
City and state leaders have drawn some boundaries:
- The deployment is requested by local officials (Minneapolis and Hennepin County), and the Guard is operating under state authority , not as a federal force.
- The city has stressed that “the federal government has no involvement” in directing the Guard’s activities; their role is separate from federal immigration and law‑enforcement operations.
- The governor’s office has said that calling up the Guard is about maintaining public safety and crowd management, not endorsing federal immigration crackdowns.
- Historically and legally, the National Guard in this kind of domestic mission does not act like regular active‑duty military on the streets: they support civil authorities, can help with crowd control and protection of facilities, but are not there to impose martial law or lead general law‑enforcement operations.
What it will look like on the ground
Local agencies have tried to make the Guard’s presence visually clearer and somewhat less intimidating:
- Guard members are expected to wear neon reflective vests so people can distinguish them from federal agents and other uniformed officers.
- You’ll most likely see them:
- Near the 26th & Nicollet shooting site, managing the perimeter and access.
- Around the B.H. Whipple Federal Building, especially when protests are scheduled.
- Assisting with traffic control and fixed security posts rather than roaming citywide.
- Local police, state patrol, and other Twin Cities agencies remain the main responders to regular calls for service, with the Guard adding “depth and capability.”
How this ties into protests and public concern
City officials are openly criticizing the scale and behavior of federal immigration operations and the presence of thousands of federal agents:
- Minneapolis leaders say federal operations have disrupted public safety and created “terror and fear” among residents, especially immigrant communities who are afraid to do basic things like go to the store or send kids to school.
- At the same time, they’re asking residents to:
- Protest peacefully.
- Avoid escalation with both federal agents and Guard members.
- Remember that the Guard’s stated job is protection and support, not running the federal operation itself.
On forums and social media, some locals talk about responding with non‑violent satire or costumes at protests, partly as a way to avoid playing into any narrative of “violent rioters,” and partly to humanize the situation for Guard members themselves.
In short
In Minneapolis right now, the National Guard is being used as a support force : guarding specific sites, helping manage traffic and perimeters, and backing up stretched local agencies so protests and daily life can continue as safely as possible, while elected officials continue to push back on federal actions they say are endangering residents.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.