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Futuro Media founder Maria Hinojosa has come under fire for comparing ICE agents to Nazis and Latino children to Anne Frank during an appearance on MSNBC’s “The Weekend.”

During the segment, co-host Eugene Daniels argued that “callousness” has become the hallmark of how Trump’s team enforces its policies nationwide. He then directed the question to Hinojosa, pressing her on the psychological impact immigration policies have on Black and Latino communities.

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“I posted, actually, right after that first day on the ground in Chicago, I posted about the fact that there are little Anne Franks, right?” she responded. “Anne Frank, in Chicago, her name is Anita Franco, and she is terrified.”

“Look, I grew up in the city of Chicago,” Hinojosa continued. “It’s a city of neighborhoods, and we do not like outsiders coming to tell us how to run our city. Our history is that Black and Latino unity in the city of Chicago will only grow thanks to Donald Trump and his Republican Party. So that is something that he and his Republican Party have feared—that unity of Black and Brown people coming together.”

The comparison drew immediate backlash on social media, with users accusing Hinojosa of trivializing the Holocaust.

“Anne Frank did not commit any crime. She went into hiding solely because she was Jewish,” one commenter wrote. “If the Nazis found her, she would likely be put to death. The illegals in the US have no legal right to be here. They may be arrested, but they are not being sent to the gas chambers.”

Another user responded: “Absolutely SICK of you to compare Anne Frank to Mexican children being sent home. Anne wasn’t going home!!! You are a twisted individual to expect people who committed a crime entering this nation illegally to be treated the same as a Jew living in Nazi Germany!”

Federal agents take security measures against protesters blocking the entrance to a vehicle transporting ICE detainees at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement processing facility during a 12-hour demonstration against expanded immigration enforcement operations on September 12, 2025 in Broadview, Illinois. (Photo by Jacek Boczarski/Anadolu via Getty Images)

As part of campaign promises from his 2024 election, President Trump has intensified immigration enforcement operations across multiple cities, targeting illegal immigrants with criminal records. ICE agents have routinely worn masks during operations to avoid being identified and targeted by activists who frequently compare them to Nazi enforcers and attempt to publicize their personal information online.

On Wednesday, Vice President JD Vance addressed the rhetoric while responding to a shooting at a Dallas ICE facility where a sniper killed one detainee and critically injured two others before taking his own life.

“If you want to stop political violence, stop attacking our law enforcement as the Gestapo. If you want to stop political violence, stop telling your supporters that everybody who disagrees with you is a Nazi.”

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem also blamed anti-ICE and Nazi comparisons from the far left for the tragic shooting.

“Comparing ICE day in and day out to the Nazi Gestapo, the Secret Police, and slave patrols has consequences,” Noem wrote on X. “The men and women of ICE are fathers and mothers, sons and daughters. They get up every morning to try and make our communities safer. Like everyone else, they just want to go home to their families at night.”


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