This week on Consider This.
After ICE agents flooded into Chicago,
activists came up with the resistance plan they think other cities can follow.
It boils down to making immigration enforcement as inefficient as possible.
Time and money.
Time and money.
A report from Chicago.
Listen this week to Consider This from NPR on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Windsor Johnston.
Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene says she's leaving Congress on January 5th,
a move that marks another sharp turn in her turbulent political trajectory.
Her announcement follows months of public clashes with party leaders and former allies.
NPR's Amy Held reports the news seems to have taken aback even Republican insiders.
President Trump told ABC News in a phone call he was not given a heads up.
But he thinks Greene's departure from Congress is, quote, great.
Green, a one-time hard-right, die-hard Trump loyalist,
helped lead the party to defy him in Congress with the vote to release the Epstein files.
In a video message announcing her resignation, Green made a prediction.
Republicans will likely lose the midterms.
Green rose to fame embracing QAnon conspiracy theories.