Bruce Springsteen Takes a Stand of Resistance in Minneapolis
Bruce Springsteen Takes a Stand of Resistance in Minneapolis
Eric CortellessaThu, April 2, 2026 at 12:48 AM UTC
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When Bruce Springsteen walked onstage, he didnât mince words. He didnât clear his throat, rhetorically or otherwise. He got straight to the point. He had come to Minneapolis with a mission.
After the Trump administration deployed roughly 3,000 federal officers to Minneapolis this winterâthe largest immigration enforcement action in the country, an operation that resulted in the killings of two AmericansâSpringsteen responded in the way he knew best: he went into the studio, writing and recording his fiercest protest song in years. Then came his next move: an impromptu 18-stop tour, beginning in Minneapolis and ending in Washington, D.C. The itinerary spoke for itself. The journey would take him from the scene of the carnage to the seat of power.
To that end, Springsteen opened his âLand of Hope and Dreams American Tourâ at the Target Center on March 31 with a rousing monologue against the man in the Oval Office. âThe mighty E Street Band is here tonight to call upon the righteous power of art, of music, or rock and roll, in dangerous times,â he began. âWe are here in celebration and defense of our American ideals, democracy, our constitution, and our sacred American promise.â
Historians may remember the performance as among the most unflinching acts of musical and theatrical resistance mounted against Donald Trumpâor any president, for that matterâin the nationâs history. Springsteen channeled a lineage of dissent that runs through the countryâs cultural bloodstream, blending the moral clarity and populism of Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie with the propulsive, confrontational energy of Rage Against the Machine, all carried forward by the full force of the E Street Band.
He was joined, in fact, by Rageâs Tom Morello, the sonically innovative guitarist, for 11 numbers of the 27-song set that was his most politically charged in decades: from the howl of fury against the loss of blue-collar dignity in âDeath to My Hometown,â âYoungstown,â and âThe Ghost of Tom Joadâ; to the sorrow of police brutality in âAmerican Skin (41 Shots)â; to defiance against democratic backsliding in âHouse of a Thousand Guitarsâ; to the gospel-infused promise of inclusion and redemption in âLand of Hope and Dreamsâ; to closing with Bob Dylanâs âChimes of Freedom,â a hymn of solidarity with the downtrodden and dispossessed.
Tom Morello, Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band perform during Land of Hope & Dreams American Tour. âKevin Mazur/Getty Images
Springsteen, 76, opened the show with a secular sermon that was an and intensified version of the one he delivered last summer on tour in Europe, calling upon the crowd to âjoin with us in choosing hope over fear, democracy over authoritarianism, the rule of law over lawlessness, ethics over unbridled corruption, resistance over complacency, unity over division, and peace over war.â He then segued into his cover of the Edwin Starr classic âWar,â which had been part of the Born in the U.S.A. tour setlist in the 1980s, when the country was still grappling with the aftershocks of Vietnam War. He moved from there to âBorn in the U.S.A.â itselfâthe thundering hit that tells the story of a disillusioned veteran returning home to a country that has little use for him.
The song, as he played it this night, was imbued with new meaning. At the time of its release, it was swiftly co-opted by President Ronald Reagan for his âMorning in Americaâ reelection message. Springsteenâs reaction was a mix of mortification and bemusement. But as the years passedâand the song was recast as a kind of flag-saluting anthemâhis frustration only grew. The track was neither the uncomplicated patriotic ode its admirers heard nor the anti-American screed its critics alleged.
ââBorn in the U.S.A.â was a critical piece of patriotism,â he told me last fall. âTo understand that song, youâve got to be able to hold two contradictory thoughts in your mind at the same timeâthat you can feel betrayed by your country and still love it.â The tension is embedded in the songâs architecture: the surging choruses carry the pride; the verses, the indictment. Because of its misinterpretation, he has rarely performed it on American stages in recent decadesâpart of what made its inclusion here so striking. In his own way, Springsteen opened his Minneapolis concert by asking the audience to sit with that same contradiction: insisting on it as a difficult but necessary civic exercise.
He was pushing on an open door. It was the communion the Boss had already forged with the Twin Cities crowd that gave the show its spiritual backbone. In recent months, Minneapolis had become the epicenter of Springsteenâs political imagination. On Jan. 28, just weeks after the killings of RenĂ©e Good and Alex Pretti, he released âStreets of Minneapolis,â a searing protest aimed at the Trump Administration and its deportation campaign. Written and recorded within days of Prettiâs killing, the song functioned as both elegy and indictment, quickly becoming a rallying cry for a burgeoning resistance movement.
The response was immediate. The track surged online, climbing to the top of YouTubeâs trending chart and drawing millions of views within hours. Tuesday night was his first live performance of that song with the band which served as the nightâs emotional center. He began alone at center stage, voice low, the arrangement spare, before the E Street Band surged in behind him. The audience of nearly 18,000 lifted their phones in the air, a constellation of light shimmering across the arena. At Springsteenâs cue, they shoutedââICE out now!âânot once, not twice, not three times, but four, each repetition louder than the last, as if they were willing the words into reality. A quick glance around the venue revealed tearful eyes in every direction.
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Midway through the show, Springsteen outlined his view of the sweep of Trumpâs transgressions. He spoke of war in Iran with no constitutional authorization; of immigrants detained, deported, and sent to foreign gulags without due process; of a Justice Department that has abdicated its independence; of a takeover of cultural institutions to obscure uncomfortable historical truths; of an emerging oligarchy in which immense wealth has translated into political power and personal gain; of an erosion of sacred democratic norms.
âThis White House is destroying the American idea and our reputation around the world,â Springsteen preached. âWe are no longer the land of the free and the home of the brave. We are now, to many, America the reckless, unpredictable, predatory rogue nation. That is this administrationâs and this presidentâs legacy. This is happening now.â
And yet, he ended his remarks with a message of guarded optimism: that the actions of those in power do not reflect the character of those they govern. âHonesty, honor, humility, compassion, thoughtfulness, morality, true strength, and decencyâdonât let anybody tell you that these things donât matter anymore,â he said. âThey do. They are at the heart of the kind of men and women we are, the kind of citizens we are, the kind of country weâll be leaving to our children.â
Springsteen then moved into âMy City in Ruins,â a song whose resonance has evolved over time. Originally written as a meditation on the economic decline of Asbury Park, it became an anthem of resilience after the September 11 attacks. Now, itâs sung as a lament for a nation sundered by its own infighting and tribal dividesâand as a call for resurrection and rebirth.
Born in the U.S.A. and the Reagan era werenât Springsteenâs only points of return. He also revisited âLong Walk Home,â written about the countryâs moral drift during the George W. Bush years: calamitous wars, the sanctioning of torture, the expansion of the surveillance state, and the erosion of civil liberties. Like âBorn in the U.S.A.,â it centers on a man coming home to a place that no longer feels like his own. He recalls his fatherâs wordsâan inheritance of belief as much as memoryâabout the nationâs promise: a place bound together by shared ideals, by a sense that certain things were fixed and enduring. âYour flag flyinâ over the courthouse means certain things are set in stone,â the father tells him, âwho we are, what weâll do, and what we wonât.â
In that vein, as Springsteen has come to occupy his role as not just a performer but a patriarch, a kind of moral elder to his audience, to his musical heirs, to the circle of artists willing to take public stands, he has revived and amplified one of his central tenets: that dissent is not a rejection of patriotism but its highest expression.
Toward the end of the show, Springsteen again invoked the names of RenĂ©e Good and Alex Pretti. In the final stretch of the performance, he sat down and spoke about what had compelled him to engineer a pop-up tour in the weeks after their deathsâevents that had unfolded just miles from the Target Center a little more than two months earlier.
He lingered on Goodâs final words, captured on video as she spoke through her car window to the agent who shot her: âThatâs fine, dude, Iâm not mad at you.â Springsteen paused. âGod bless her,â he said. âTonight, when you go home, hold your loved ones close. And tomorrow, do as RenĂ©e did: find a way to take aggressive, peaceful action to defend our countryâs ideals.â He paused, then reached for the words of John Lewis: âGo out and get in some good trouble. Say something, do something. Hell, sing something!â
Before he left the stage, he turned back once more, offering a final refrain that hung in the air, as much as a question as a challenge: âAre you with us?â
Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ