For the 79th 12 months, mariachi musicians, waving Mexican flags and shouts of “Viva Mexico,” flooded Cesar Chavez Avenue in East Los Angeles on Sunday for the annual Mexican Independence Day parade and celebration.
However this 12 months, within the face of the Trump administration’s relentless immigration crackdown — not too long ago bolstered by the Supreme Courtroom resolution that permits federal brokers to restart their controversial “roving patrols” throughout Southern California — there was a renewed sense of defiance, and of satisfaction.
For a lot of, it was much more necessary to point out up. To face tall.
“We’re right here and we’re going to proceed combating for our rights and for others who can not battle for themselves,” Samantha Robles, 21, stated as she watched the parade roll by. “I’m glad that many individuals are right here to allow them to increase their flags — simply not the Mexican flag, but additionally the American flag, as a result of we’re each Mexican American.”
Members of the Mexican Consulate in Los Angeles maintain a Mexican flag on the East L.A. Mexican Independence Day Parade & Competition on Cesar Chavez Avenue on Sunday in Los Angeles.
(Carlin Stiehl/Los Angeles Occasions)
However the parade was additionally a bittersweet second for Robles. This 12 months, her grandmother opted to remain house, given ongoing sweeping immigration raids throughout the area. A brand new Supreme Courtroom ruling licensed U.S. immigration brokers to cease and detain anybody they could suspect is within the U.S. illegally, even when primarily based on little greater than their job at a automotive wash, talking Spanish or having brown pores and skin. Immigration rights attorneys and native leaders have denounced that as discriminatory and harmful, and it has stoked fears in Robles, who describes herself as an East L.A. native.
“I’ve my brown pores and skin, I’ve my Indigenous options,” Robles stated. “I’m afraid not only for myself, [but] for my pals who’re additionally from Mexico and so they got here right here for extra alternatives, for the next schooling. … I’m afraid for individuals who are getting taken away from their households.”
The Comité Mexicano Civico Patriotico Inc., which organized Sunday’s parade and celebration, addressed these fears in a press convention on Friday, however determined to maneuver forward with its celebration of Mexican independence from Spain, because it has carried out so in September for many years.
That call appeared to drive a way of proud resistance on Sunday.
“Aqui estamos y no nos vamos!” (“We’re right here and we’re not leaving!”) yelled Rosario Marín, the previous mayor of Huntington Park and the parade’s madrina, or godmother.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass holds TJ’s parrot Pepe Hermon on the East L.A. Mexican Independence Day Parade & Competition on Sunday in Los Angeles.
(Carlin Stiehl/Los Angeles Occasions)
When Mayor Karen Bass rode by the gang, she learn aloud an indication from the sidewalk that stated: “Trump Should Go!”
The group cheered.
“I used to be simply studying the signal,” she stated, with a smile on her face. However Bass reiterated her assist for her Latino constituents, and her opposition to the continued immigration raids, calling them horrible.
“Our metropolis stands united,” Bass instructed the gang. “We’re a metropolis of immigrants. We perceive that fifty% of our metropolis is Latino, and the concept that Latinos can be focused is abhorrent.”
The Trump administration has insisted its immigration actions are merely an try and implement the regulation, and has blasted Bass and different metropolis leaders for stoking resistance. However many Latino leaders say the administration’s use of drive is an abuse of energy, stoking fears that have damage individuals and the area’s financial system.

Alfonso Fox Orozco wears conventional Mexican gown on the East L.A. Parade & Competition on Sunday in Los Angeles.
(Carlin Stiehl/Los Angeles Occasions)
Such considerations might have affected Sunday’s parade, which appeared much less attended than prior years. Anti-Trump and Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE indicators, lined the road. Organizations such because the United Lecturers Los Angeles yelled out “La migra no, la escuela si.” (“No immigration enforcement, sure colleges!”)
Jenny Hernandez, a fifth-generation East L.A. resident, held up a selfmade signal that learn “Crush ICE.” The 51-year-old has been disturbed by the current raids, a lot of which have focused people within the office.
“What they’re doing is mistaken,” she stated. “We’re not criminals. We’re Mexican, Hispanic, Latino, Chicano, no matter you need to name it…. We don’t deserve this remedy.… There must be a change.”

La Catrina Andante sits atop a automotive in conventional face paint on the parade Sunday in Los Angeles.
(Carlin Stiehl/Los Angeles Occasions)
However largely, the day emanated Latino pleasure, unseen in current months. Burnt sage stuffed the air at one intersection, courtesy of a Danza Azteca group, whereas attendees — some in conventional embroidered attire and shirts — relished the cumbia track blasting from a close-by radio.
A younger lady, not more than 5 years outdated, belted out a name for “fresas” alongside her mom, a avenue vendor. A grandmother sat along with her lap lined in a blanket, knitted with the colours of the Mexican flag. Politicians, youngsters, dancers and charros, or males using dancing horses, shouted, “Viva Mexico!”

Women dressed as distributors from Patzcuaro, Michoacan, steadiness on pots on the East L.A. Parade & Competition Sunday in Los Angeles.
(Carlin Stiehl/Los Angeles Occasions)
Different ethnic teams joined the favored celebration, together with waves of Puerto Ricans, Bolivians and Salvadorans. Notable faces included Snow Tha Product and Actual 92.3 FM radio host Large Boy, who at one level took the reins as an elotero vendor. Area shuttle astronaut José M. Hernández led the parade as grand marshal. , His journey from migrant farmworker to NASA astronaut was detailed within the Amazon Prime movie “A Million Miles Away.”
Giselle Salgado, additionally an East L.A. native, stated it was necessary to see a great turnout from her neighborhood, in addition to from public officers, although she observed a smaller crowd this 12 months.
“We’re not afraid,” she stated. “That is our custom, we’ve at all times come out right here. … I’m certain lots of people are scared, however they’re nonetheless right here. We’re not going to let worry and intimidation work in opposition to us.”