Daniel Lurie, the 46th Mayor of the City and County of San Francisco. (Photo: sf.gov)
Mayor Lurie’s Perilous Gamble with Federal Authority
The mayor doubles-down on San Francisco’s Sanctuary stance
By Richie Greenberg, January 26, 2026 3:55 am
In the wake of the January 34, 2026, shooting in Minneapolis, where a federal Border Patrol agent fatally shot local activist Alex Pretti amid disputed circumstances, San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie took to Twitter/X to reaffirm his city’s sanctuary policies.
In San Francisco, especially in communities that are already enduring the painful impact of aggressive federal immigration enforcement, many of us are feeling fear and anger as we witness the horrific events unfolding in Minneapolis. Yesterday San Franciscans, as they have done…
— Daniel Lurie 丹尼爾·羅偉 (@DanielLurie) January 25, 2026
Lurie’s statement emphasized that SFPD would prioritize public safety over assisting federal immigration enforcement like ICE, framing increased police presence ahead of Super Bowl week and Lunar New Year as protective rather than collaborative. This rhetoric echoes the mayor’s October 2025 phone call with President Trump, where he successfully pleaded for a pause on surging federal agents into San Francisco. While Lurie falsely touted this as a “victory” for the city’s recovery, his ongoing resistance to federal agencies like ICE and DHS represents a reckless gamble, one that endangers public safety, fiscal stability, and political standing. By foolishly doubling down on the city’s long-standing sanctuary defiance, Lurie is playing with fire in an era of intensified national immigration enforcement, inviting a backlash that could scorch San Francisco’s already fragile progress.
Mayor Lurie’s sanctuary stance actively undermines public safety by obstructing federal agencies tasked with immigration enforcement. His post today reassures immigrants that SFPD won’t assist ICE, but this policy has drawn sharp rebukes for shielding criminal elements. Supervisors from immigrant-dense districts criticized Lurie’s selective calls for more federal involvement in fentanyl crackdowns, fearing it invites broader ICE overreach. Protesters last July 2025 slammed his “tepid” response to ICE raids, accusing him of policing demonstrators while protecting federal agents in a self-proclaimed sanctuary city. By drawing a false firewall between local and federal roles, Lurie ignores how undocumented networks contribute to San Francisco’s drug crisis, as fentanyl overdoses remain rampant and open-air markets in the Tenderloin and South of Market (SoMa) neighborhoods linked to transnational cartels.
The mayor’s November 2025 Twitter/X posts highlight collaborations with federal partners for drug ops, yet he rejects military or ICE support outright.
This cherry-picking is foolish: resisting comprehensive enforcement allows repeat offenders to exploit sanctuary loopholes, endangering residents. In a post-2024 Trump era of mass deportations, Lurie’s defiance will provoke a retaliatory surge, turning symbolic resistance into real chaos during high-profile events like the Super Bowl.
Economically, Lurie’s approach is equally shortsighted, gambling with the city’s fiscal health amid federal pressures. His December 2025 Twitter/X post lamented budget strains from “federal actions,” including SNAP disruptions from a government shutdown. Yet by pleading with Trump to halt federal deployments, citing economic recovery, Lurie tacitly admits sanctuary policies invite punitive measures, such as withheld grants. Progressive critics of Lurie contend he gave Trump too much leverage in the phone call, offering vague assurances of progress without securing lasting protections, potentially exacerbating downtown decay and continued business flight. With revenues weakly rebounding but always vulnerable, continued resistance by Lurie, and city hall officials, risks deeper cuts.
Politically, Lurie is isolating San Francisco in a polarized landscape. His October executive directive bolstering immigrant support amid anticipated enforcement escalations positions the city as a staunchly defiant outlier. Lurie’s celebrating the Trump phone call as proof of influence ignores the administration’s history of abrupt reversals. By “playing with fire,” he courts a federal inferno: renewed deployments, legal battles, or even military intervention, as was nearly the case in October. And Trump again promises to withhold payments to sanctuary cities like San Francisco, this time February 1st, 2026.
Mayor Lurie’s persistent resistance to federal law enforcement is not bold leadership but rather a foolish brinkmanship. It jeopardizes safety by harboring threats, strains finances through avoidable conflicts, and risks political isolation; the city’s strength lies in collaboration, not confrontation. Lurie must extinguish this risky stance without delay.
- Mayor Lurie’s Perilous Gamble with Federal Authority - January 26, 2026
- Newsom’s Latest Disaster: A Davos Tantrum - January 20, 2026
- Mayor Lurie’s State of the City: A Critical Examination - January 16, 2026




