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April 30, 2026

Want mass deportation? Houston can feel demonic. 

Here's why.

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Good morning.

Exposure to different political perspectives can be discomforting, but these days I’ve noticed that folks treat it as particularly hellish. I blame the internet. The online experience has made it far too easy to create information bubbles where our most passionate opinions are always correct and our personal enemies are universally loathed. In comparison to that epistemological Elysium, the messiness of our real world can feel positively demonic.

So I’d imagine many Houstonians found themselves enduring that infernal experience over the past few weeks as City Hall debated how the Houston Police Department should — and shouldn’t — be involved in enforcing immigration law. 

For all of the rhetoric coming out of the White House in support of mass deportation, the Kinder Institute has found that the overwhelming majority of Houstonians think the right response to illegal immigration is more pathways to citizenship. At the same time, there is still a significant rump of residents who want mass deportation. Confronting that reality can be painful. 

Read my column on this tension between a digital opinion heaven and a messy reality. 

After all, the Houston Chronicle opinion section exists to help pierce the heavenly veil and reflect the full spectrum of opinion in our city. If some of the content makes you feel uncomfortable, consider it a sign that we’re doing our job. But we can’t do our job unless you share your opinions. So keep those op-eds and letters to the editor coming.

If you need a prompt to get you started, this week we’re asking Houstonians how they feel about the job market. Send us your answer here.

And if you’re looking for a sign from above that the Houston Chronicle really does care about our city, the Texas Managing Editors just gave the editorial board its top community service.

Photo of Bayliss Wagner

Evan Mintz, Editor of Opinion and Community Engagement

evan.mintz@houstonchronicle.com

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Our picks

Chloe Childress, a Camp Mystic counselor who grew up in Houston, was killed in July 4 flooding in the Texas Hill Country.

Photo by: Courtesy Matthew Childress

Mother Nature didn’t kill my Chloe. Camp Mystic’s bad decisions did. | Opinion

Nine months after the flood, the camp’s pattern of failure is clear.

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Stuffed animals and other mementos are displayed beneath a wooden memorial cross along Texas 39 near the Guadalupe River and Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas, on Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025.

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We're therapists. It's too soon for kids to return to Camp Mystic. | Opinion

It is common for children to want to return to the place where trauma occurred. This is often misread as resilience. But wanting to return is not the same as being ready. 

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Texas state lawmakers serving on general investigating committees examining the July 2025 flooding walk the grounds of Camp Mystic during a site visit in Hunt, Texas, on Monday, April 20, 2026.

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We're sending our daughter back to Camp Mystic. It deserves fairness. | Opinion

Blame is immediate. It is satisfying. It has a target. Truth is slower. It is harder. It requires restraint.

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Houston Mayor John Whitmire listens to a speaker during a City Council meeting considering whether to repeal a newly approved proposal limiting cooperation with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement at City Hall in Houston on Wednesday, April 22, 2026.

Photo by: Raquel Natalicchio, Houston Chronicle

Whitmire promised to protect Houston from 'turmoil.' He failed. | Editorial

Enough waffling, Mayor Whitmire. Time to side with enforcing local laws and keeping Houston safe, not with aiding Donald Trump's immigration dragnet, writes the Houston Chronicle editorial board.

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Houston City Council member Sandra Salinas speaks during a City Council meeting considering whether to repeal a newly approved proposal limiting cooperation with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement at City Hall in Houston on Wednesday, April 22, 2026.

Photo by: Raquel Natalicchio, Houston Chronicle

The real scandal isn’t ICE. It’s Houston’s failure to solve crimes | Opinion

There are good reasons not to involve local police in immigration enforcement, but Houston’s debate on HPD and ICE was often more about political theater than objective facts, writes Bill King.

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When a mass grave of 30 Texans was discovered more than a century after the Battle of Glorieta Pass, the remains were reinterred at the Santa Fe National Cemetery.

Photo by: Susan Holley / Susan Holley

Annex part of New Mexico? They’ve whooped Texas enough already. | Opinion

House Speaker Dustin Burrows wants Texas to study annexing part of New Mexico. Look up 'Santa Fe Expedition' or 'Battle of Glorieta Pass,' writes Joe Holley.

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Looking north from Interstate 45 Gulf Freeway, only the silhouettes of buildings are visible as a blanket of haze settles over downtown Houston Monday, May 27, 2024.

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This Earth Day, Houston's air is getting dirtier | Opinion

Earth Day is supposed to be a moment to take stock of progress. In Houston, it is also a reminder of how quickly that progress can be undone.

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Pumpjacks operate next to large wind turbines Friday, July 8, 2022, near Midland.

Photo by: Jon Shapley, Houston Chronicle

Here’s what the Texas energy sector can do to celebrate Earth Day | Opinion

Believe it or not, but Earth Day has its origins in Texas. And our energy economy has done a great deal to improve the environment — but there's more work to be done, writes Michael E. Webber.

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JOHNNY HANSON : CHRONICLE AUTHOR: Michael Berryhill wrote The Trials of Eroy Brown and says the prisoner feels he is being retaliated against for events in 1981.

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How the killing of a warden changed the Texas prison system | Opinion

Journalist Michael Berryhill didn't just help secure the freedom of Eroy Brown. His book on the murder trial of Brown exposed the cruelty of the Texas prison system, writes UH professor Kevin Prufer.

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The Texas A&M Corps of Cadets march to the stadium before an NCAA college football game against Texas at Kyle Field, Saturday, Nov. 30, 2024, in College Station.

Photo by: Brett Coomer, Staff Photographer

No yelling. At Texas A&M, Aggies learn how true leaders disagree. | Opinion

The answer to our current moment is not noise. It is character.

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Congregation Beth Israel is shown in Houston Friday, April 24, 2026.

Photo by: Melissa Phillip, Houston Chronicle

We received an antisemitic threat. How must we respond? | Opinion

Jewish tradition teaches us to embrace the world, not fence ourselves off from it. But how do you balance that with growing antisemitism?

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The Houston Comets' Sheryl Swoopes looks for a teammate to pass to as the Connecticut Sun's Brooke Wyckoff defends in the second half of the Sun-Comets WNBA game in Uncasville, Conn., Friday, July 15, 2005. More than 20 years later, the Connecticut Sun are moving to Houston and will be rebranded as the Comets.

Photo by: BOB CHILD, AP

Travis Scott, let the Comets have their name | Thumbs

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Bianka Gardner, left, gets some help from Marisa Williams placing a feather into her headband as members of the Alabama-Coushatta perform dances and talk about the tribe̢۪s history at the Heritage Museum of Montgomery County, Saturday, Nov. 16 2019, in Conroe.

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On San Jacinto Day, remember the Alabama-Coushatta | Editorial

Where would Texas be without the Alabama-Coushatta, and yet where are they in stories celebrating early Texas, writes the editorial board.

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Abram Diaz, Derian Villacorta, and Anthony Sosa run through a firefighting drill in a Fire/EMS class at HISD’s Cesar E. Chavez High School in Houston, Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026. The Houston Independent School District high school offers a program for students interested in becoming firefighters, EMTs, or emergency dispatchers and the medical field. Through its Career and Technical Education programs, the district equips students with real-world skills and industry certifications that prepare them for potential careers in these fields.

Photo by: Brett Coomer, Houston Chronicle

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Yes, Houston firefighters did get a raise. No, it wasn’t a secret, writes Marty Lancton, president of the Houston Professional Fire Fighters Association. 

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Elon Musk’s political airballs should worry Greg Abbott | Opinion

Greg Abbott hitching his re-election to Elon Musk amid the billionaire's fading influence and growing baggage could prove a costly misfire.

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Political cartoon by David Horsey
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From our readers

A poster displaying the Ten Commandments is seen after a Conroe ISD school board meeting in Conroe, Tuesday, Aug. 19, 2025. Texas Senate Bill 10 mandates the display of the Ten Commandments in all public school classrooms effective Sept. 1.

Photo by: Jason Fochtman, Houston Chronicle

Why Ten Commandments fights are about keeping politicians in check | Opinion

"Contrary to common belief, many people who oppose Ten Commandments monuments do not have any animus towards what the Commandments say," writes David R. Hoffman. 

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Students work in a classroom at MindSprout Montessori in Spring, Texas, on Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026.

Photo by: Raquel Natalicchio, Houston Chronicle

Moms for Liberty fights for student education, not culture wars | Opinion

"We advocate for a return to strong academic fundamentals: language arts instruction grounded in the science of reading, and math curricula focused on essential skills," writes Denise Bell. 

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U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas answers questions after his special lecture celebrating the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence at Hogg Memorial Auditorium at the University of Texas on Wednesday, April 15, 2026.

Photo by: Jay Janner, Austin American-Statesman

I'm a UT Austin alum. Justice Clarence Thomas' speech concerns me. | Opinion

"As a UT grad, I have great respect for UT, but I also have great concern for the outcome of its ongoing alliances with MAGA bedfellows," writes James L. Hildebran. 

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The Guadalupe River flows past Camp Mystic in Hunt, Texas, on Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025.

Photo by: Sam Owens, San Antonio Express-News

The blame isn't just on Camp Mystic, but on Austin, too | Opinion

"Let’s put the blame for the Camp Mystic deaths where it really belongs: on Mother Nature and on Austin," writes Janet A. Nussbaum. 

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Mayor John Whitmire and Houston Police Chief Noe Diaz speak to the media about the city’s immigration policies, after reports that at least two officers violated policies by transporting people to ICE, during a news conference at HPD headquarters in Houston, Wednesday, March 11, 2026.

Photo by: Brett Coomer, Houston Chronicle

I voted for Whitmire to defend Houston, not Abbott's agenda | Opinion

"The mayor should not allow this city to be held hostage and blackmailed by a mean-spirited governor," writes Sammye Larson. 

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Attendees walk the convention floor and browse firearms and merchandise during the National Rifle Association convention at the George R. Brown Convention Center in Houston, Friday, April 17, 2026.

Photo by: Raquel Natalicchio, Houston Chronicle

I'm a gun owner. We need better gun laws to protect children. | Opinion

"The Second Amendment can and should work hand in hand with commonsense gun safety laws that save lives," writes Scott Spreier.  

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Send us your letters and op-eds

We want to hear from you! Have an opinion or a response to one of our stories? Learn how to submit your op-eds or letters here or shoot us an email at viewpoints@chron.com.


Events

How to save on your property taxes

Photo by: Houston Chronicle Staff

EVENT: How to save on property taxes with chief appraisers

Houston Chronicle and Chron.com readers are invited to a virtual event on April 30 at noon CST featuring local appraisal leaders and Chronicle journalists discussing 2025 property trends, tax-saving exemptions, and the protest process.

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HISD chief to lead Beaumont ISD state takeover as superintendent

Plus: HISD expands number of AI-focused schools.

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Mike Morath, Texas Education Agency commissioner, speaks during a media conference after touring several classrooms at the Kinder High School for the Performing and Visual Arts in Houston, Wednesday, May 14, 2025.

Photo by: Melissa Phillip, Houston Chronicle

TEA names Houston ISD chief Sandi Massey to lead Beaumont ISD takeover

TEA's appointment of Massey to lead Beaumont ISD is the latest in a series of HISD officials moving to run districts under state takeover.

Read More


More education news:

  • Here are the HISD schools that will become AI-focused Future 2 Schools: Mike Miles says the schools will prepare students for a future where "AI will be ubiquitous." Read More
  • Houston-area schools lose up to 1 in 5 immigrant students amid federal crackdown: Houston-area districts lost more than 8,000 immigrant students this school year. Read More
  • Meet 8 Houston-area families hoping to win in Texas' school voucher lottery: The Houston Chronicle spoke with eight families across the Houston area to better understand what’s driving them to apply to Texas' school voucher program. Read More

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© 2026 Hearst Newspapers, LLC