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Bruce Springsteen’s protest single “Streets of Minneapolis,” released Jan. 28 in response to deadly federal immigration enforcement actions in Minneapolis, debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Digital Song Sales chart despite being available for only two days of the tracking week.
Luminate data show the track sold about 16,000 downloads in the week ending Jan. 29 and drew roughly 678,000 official U.S. streams plus a 175,000 airplay audience in that short span, also entering the Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart at No. 20.
Springsteen wrote and dedicated the song to the people of Minneapolis and the memory of Renée Good and Alex Pretti, two 37-year-olds killed in separate encounters with federal immigration agents amid the Operation Metro Surge.
He first performed the song live at a benefit concert in Minneapolis on Jan. 30.
The release has prompted sharp reactions across the political spectrum, including criticism from Lara Trump and pushback from a Department of Homeland Security official.
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This release represents a chart milestone for Springsteen and highlights how modest paid‑download numbers, augmented by streams, can propel a politically charged song to prominent chart visibility and help sustain public attention on the underlying issue.



















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