The enterprise closed, the children skipped the school “one day without immigration”

On Monday, dozens of enterprises across the country were closed in Southern California and all over the country. The school reported that the attendance rate was low. During the grocery store, the family was in the grocery store with “one day without immigration”.
Last week, the actions that began to spread on social media appealed to encourage immigrants to skip work, allow children to go home from school and avoid shopping on Monday.
Enterprises from all over the United States announced their closure on social media. Omaha’s Quinceañera boutique. A coffee shop in Yanhu City. Baltimore’s second -hand car. A accounting firm in Pasco, Washington State.
The protest on Monday was one month after the term of President Trump, and in February 2017, similar actions were taken nationwide in February 2017. Then, like Monday, students are far away from the school, and workers have no reporting work, including employees of the Coffee Shop of the Senate of Washington Special Administrative Region
Wendy Guardado, a Los Angeles activist, helped organize this operation. He said that she calculated nearly 250 companies nationwide, which kept similar to the movement. Other agencies found that they lacked workers. In AbBey Food & Bar, this is a popular LGBTQ+nightclub in Western Hollywood. The kitchen was closed due to the shortage of personnel.
She said that on Monday’s operation, she only started. She heard that many people could not spend a day off work, only a week of notice.
Guadoro said: “There are still many things to do, because Trump has four years.”
According to regional data, the entire Los Angeles is unified, with a attendance rate of 66 % on Monday, while the entire year is 93 %, and 91 % last week. Gwado said that the three regions teachers told her that their classrooms were empty. Others told her that their classrooms were almost empty.
Jonah Ocampo, a 5 -year -old, protested President Trump’s immigration policy in Santa Ana on February 3, 2025.
(Gina Ferazzi / LOS Angeles Times)
A spokesman for Ing Wood’s unified school district said it experienced “absent than usual students.” Santiago Unified School District SUPT. Fabi Bagula pointed out that some students and families are participating in protests, but there are no specified.
A teacher from Parmelli Street Primary School in southern Los Angeles was asked not to be named because they were not authorized to speak aloud.
The school’s chief student and family support official Sara Flores said up to 50 students in El Sol Academy in San Ana will miss the one -day school. On Monday, 180 were not appeared.
Mario Ledesma, 31, decided to close his store Pa’l Norte Workn Wear at Sacramento.
Leadesma said his father immigrated from Mexico to the United States decades ago and once sold Western boots in the local flea market. Ledesma also sold boots later, and switched to online sales during the COVID-19 popular period. He was so successful that he opened a entity four months ago.
For Ledesma, closing his just starting shop is more important a day than any profit he can earn. The name of his store means the north.
He wrote on Instagram: “In order to commemorate our people’s sacrifice to the country’s dream of the American dream, I named my business.” “We live at the moment of attacking the American dream … Let us show them without us without us without us without us. El Norte NO exists” -The United States will not exist.

The demonstrators prevented part of the St. Anna Avenue to protest President Trump’s immigration policy in San Anna on February 3, 2025.
(Gina Ferazzi / LOS Angeles Times)
The restaurant is closed to show the Salvado de Fonseca of Pacoma’s Salvado restaurant in the restaurant that shows the support of the protesters. The 30 -year -old Yonatan Franco was an unlicensed immigrant from Salvador in 2015. He hoped to order Pupusas lunch. He and his father drove at the black Nissan Xterra at noon and found the restaurant dark.
Franco said that in view of Trump’s wave of deportation of the country, he chose not to buy in large companies (such as McDonald’s, Tagit and Wal -Mart).
He said: “Those big shops are supporting Trump, and there will be many Latin Americans when they fall. We can support people who struggle with business.”
In Santa Ana, Reyna is a restaurant chef. She does not want to provide surnames because she has no legal status in the country and decided to let the children go out school and plan to abandon the grocery store on the day.
Reina has been on vacation. However, she decided to join when a friend text her on the weekend.
She said: “We are part of this economy.” “Many of our immigrants here have not hurt anyone. We just want to be better.”
Although the degree of closing the business has not been clearly clear, experts said that it should not merge the significance with US dollars and the United States.
Victor Narro, the director of the Labor Center of the University of California Los Angeles, said: “This kind of mobilization is more effective.” He said that the protest on Monday emphasized a fact, that is, the growth of the population, that is, the population increased, that is, the growth of the population, that is, the growth of the population. The birth rate decreases, and the country will have to rely more on immigration labor to keep the economy strong.
Several restaurants in California are released on social media, and they are closing to support the operation: La Casa de Maria in Auckland. In La Mirada, Barbacoa Los Gueros. From Anaheim to Venice, all 10 places for the popular Teddy red corn cake are available.
Antojitos Puebla in central Los Angeles also announced that it will close the day. On Facebook, the restaurant wrote: “Immigration is the backbone of our country.”

Thousands of marches protested by Trump’s immigration policy in central Los Angeles.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Also in the urban area, the protesters resumed the demonstration on Monday. The demonstration was closed every day in Trump’s recent administrative actions of immigrants. The action was obviously smaller and there was no sign of another highway to take over.
Outside the Los Angeles City Hall, the whistling of the helicopter was drowned by the horns and hot shouts. The 18 -year -old Katherine Sanchez couldn’t help smiling.
“This is very exciting,” Sanchez stood with his sister and his parents on Monday afternoon. She held a slogan, saying: “Your racism will not end our power.”
The senior students in Burkock high school heard the demonstration of Tiktok, and he said that she and many of her friends skipped the school to participate in the protests.
Sanchez’s father, Esteban Sanchez, is a child of Mexican immigrants and frustrated Trump’s recent news about immigration operations.
He said, “I was born here, and I feel like a foreigner.”
He added: “I thought it was not this country.” When they caught up with the roadside and joined the protesters, they rushed in spring.

During the Parade of Los Angeles, thousands of rally.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
In the center of San Anna, hundreds of protesters gathered opposite SASSCER PARK and Ronald Reagan Federal Court Building. The car is driving on the narrow streets nearby, and at the same time cheers the horn. Some cars parked between parks and courts, and began to turn the tires in place, full of smoke.
19 -year -old Fernanda Hernandez led some of her friends to the fourth street of the Latin -American Corridor in Olanzhi County. She held a slogan and said, “My parents work harder than your president.” Her two parents were Mexico’s immigration.
“Trump wants us to be scared, but we can’t.” We need to stand up for us gentlemanEssence Whether we are illegal, he wants us to leave. “
Times worker Soudi Jimenez, HOWARD BLUME, Daniel Miller and Jaweed Kaleem contributed to this report.