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East L.A.’s Mexican Independence Day parade displays its pride

Los Angeles Times

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September 15, 2025

Defiance infuses the event, a response to federal action

- BY ANDREA FLORES AND GRACE TOOHEY

East L.A.’s Mexican Independence Day parade displays its pride

CARLIN STIEHL Los Angeles Times

TRADITIONAL Mexican dances are performed Sunday in East L.A.'s Mexican Independence Day parade.

For the 79th year, mariachi musicians, waving Mexican flags and giving shouts of “Viva Mexico,” flooded Cesar Chavez Avenue in East Los Angeles on Sunday for the annual Mexican Independence Day parade and celebration.

But this year, in the face of the Trump administration’s relentless immigration crackdown — recently bolstered by the Supreme Court decision that allows federal agents to restart their controversial “roving patrols” across Southern California — there was a renewed sense of defiance, and of pride.

For many, it was even more important to show up. To stand tall.

“We're here and we're going to continue fighting for our rights and for others who cannot fight for themselves,” Samantha Robles, 21, said as she watched the parade roll by. “I'm happy that many people are here so they can raise their flags — just not the Mexican flag, but also the American flag, because we're both Mexican American.”

But the parade was also a bittersweet moment for Robles. This year, her grandmother opted to stay home, given ongoing sweeping immigration raids across the region. A new Supreme Court ruling authorized U.S. immigration agents to stop and detain anyone they might suspect is in the U.S. illegally, even if based on little more than their job at a car wash, speaking Spanish or having brown skin. Immigration rights attorneys and local leaders have denounced that as discriminatory and dangerous, and it has stoked fears in Robles, who describes herself as an East L.A. native.

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