Why many Americans are so pissed off at ICE

Why many Americans are so pissed off at ICE

Minnesotans protesting against ICE, amidst subzero temperatures and -30 degree windchills … the day before the killing of Alex Pretti.

A good friend of mine recently had a small but scary encounter with ICE**. She lives in Portland, in a residential neighborhood with a significant Hispanic/Latino population, and saw an ICE agent driving around. She took a picture of the vehicle which she is lawfully allowed to do, in fact protected by the First Amendment. The agent’s response? He turned around, drove close to her, rolled down his window, pointed to his vest, then talked smack to her before driving off.

That sounds creepy, at best. One thing he didn’t do, which ICE agents have been doing, is take pictures or video of protesters and other citizens lawfully monitoring such activity by armed agents of the federal government in the streets of their cities. Had that agent done so with my friend, she would have ended up in the federal database being compiled of protesters and observers … who ICE & DHS now routinely and grossly refer to as “agitators,” “rioters,” and “domestic terrorists” for engaging in peaceful, lawful activity protected by the First Amendment.

Maybe that kind of horrible behavior by federal agents sounds surprising to you. Maybe you haven’t been following this kind of news closely in recent weeks. Maybe you first started paying more attention after the news of the horrific shooting of Renee Good got so much attention. Now there will be more attention after the emerging news of the shooting of Alex Pretti, another citizen shot in cold blood by federal agents on the streets of Minneapolis. In this case, Mr. Pretti appears to have been exercising his First and Second Amendment rights while monitoring the public activity of federal agents. Whatever one thinks of his choice to do so, he did not deserve summary execution.

And that’s just the tip of the spear. The actions of ICE and other federal officials – particularly in DHS leadership and at the White House – have been un-Constitutional, unlawful, and amoral for weeks now. Which is part of the reason polling about ICE looks like this, even *before* this weekend’s events:

Anyone remotely familiar with politics will tell you those numbers are terrible for the Trump Administration (and Republicans in Congress), particularly the numbers among independents. Immigration used to be one of Trump’s strongest issues. It’s in the toilet now because, like the economy & the inflation – the other issue persuadable voters picked Trump on in 2024 – Trump is getting crushed, because simply put, he’s not very good at this:

Impending electoral doom in the 2026 midterms aside for Republicans in Congress (because that’s what numbers like that mean), just why exactly are many Americans protesting in cities like Los Angeles, Washington, DC, Portland, Chicago, and Minneapolis when federal crackdowns are taking place? Because federal agents are acting outside the bounds of the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, the laws of the United States, and basic human decency and morality.

Radley Balko is one of the best writers in America on the topic of criminal justice reform and recently wrote about pre-Alex Pretti events with ICE. Here’s a gift link to his full column. Balko notes the shocking degree to which DHS officials are blatantly lying. Not exaggerating, not stretching the truth, not saying something in the moment that is later proven incorrect; they’re blatantly lying every time something bad happens with an ICE agent. The shooting of Renee Good just happened to put a fine point on it because video disproving DHS statements became public so quickly:

It isn’t just the lying; it’s that the lies are wildly exaggerated and easily refutable. All the evidence we’ve seen so far, including a meticulous Times forensic analysis of the available footage, makes clear that at worst, Ms. Good mildly obstructed immigration enforcement, disobeyed ambiguous orders or perhaps attempted to flee an arrest. None of those are capital crimes, nor do law enforcement officers get to dole out punishment in such cases. At one point, President Trump justified her shooting by claiming she’d been “very disrespectful” to immigration officers. That isn’t a crime at all.

And it isn’t just Renee Good or now Alex Pretti, DHS/DOJ has had to walk back their blatant lies about other recent shootings:

We started to see this in the way the Trump administration responded to previous shootings by immigration officers, including of Carlitos Ricardo Parias in Los Angeles and Marimar Martinez in Chicago. Administration officials quickly declared those shootings justified — and righteous — with hyperbolic language similar to that used after Ms. Good’s killing. Those claims would also later be disproved by witnesses’ accounts and other evidence. The government eventually dropped the charges against Ms. MartinezA judge dismissed Mr. Parias’s charges with prejudice, meaning they can’t be brought again.

But it’s not just the shootings and killings by ICE agents that are bad – though those are quite horrific enough. It’s the regular unlawful, unethical, and amoral behavior being seen daily that frequently violates federal court rulings and DHS’s own policies and procedures:

It’s clear that immigration officials are routinely breaking the law. There’s persuasive evidence that they’ve been explicitly racially profiling people in Minneapolis and elsewhere. (The Supreme Court effectively permitted profiling people by race and other factors in a September ruling.) They’ve been requiring U.S. citizens to produce proof of their citizenship on demand — also a violation of federal law. And we’ve seen U.S. citizens dragged from their cars, homes and workplaces, then arrested or detained.

We’ve seen the unlawful arrest and incarceration of Somali refugees who have legal permission to be here, warrantless raids on private homes and reports that detainees are being denied access to lawyers. And we’ve seen routine excessive force against protesters, from casual use of chemical irritants to physical violence to firing less lethal munitions at them from close range. These are all violations of the law. Not only is there no indication that the administration has investigated any of this, but the videos it posts to social media even seem to celebrate it.

That’s why a lot of Americans are pissed. Because armed agents of the federal government are wantonly and cruelly engaged in unlawful activity against American citizens in the streets of our cities. One can argue about proper immigration policy and the related laws we should have. That’s a necessary debate, the details of which Americans can disagree on in good faith. But no American who values their freedom and believes in the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and the fact federal law enforcement should not unlawfully trample on those rights, has every cause to be seriously pissed off.

Why? Because we have eyes. Because we can see our government is blatantly lying to us about the murder of our fellow citizens by armed federal agents. And I’m so old I worked for Republicans back when the GOP actually thought that was a problem.

**Current immigration crackdowns under Trump 2.0 are being conducted by ICE – Immigration & Customs Enforcement – as well as other federal agents, including Border Patrol. For linguistic sanity and brevity, I’ve generally shorthanded that down to “ICE” throughout this column.

My Republican Journey to Kamala

My Republican Journey to Kamala

To my friends on the right, 

For the overwhelming majority of my life was a Republican.

  • I grew up volunteering for Republican campaigns
  • I served as a page for 2 GOP state legislators in Washington state
  • I worked for a U.S. Senator (Slade Gorton, R-WA), on his Senate staff and his campaign
  • I was an appointee for President George W Bush (U.S. Department of Education)
  • I was campaign chairman for my dad’s GOP run for county executive north of Seattle
  • I was a delegate to the WA GOP Convention in 2012 for Mitt Romney 

I was a Republican. Not a hard core conservative, but a Republican through and through.

Me and then U.S. Secretary of Education (and former White House Domestic Policy Advisor) Margaret Spellings in 2007.

And I believed. I believed in right-of-center ideas. I learned from a host of (mostly) good candidates and elected officials about the value of public service and good government. I learned how bloody hard competitive campaigns are. I worked on them freely, and with passion.

My professional career was shaped by my time in politics and government. After Sen. Gorton, I worked for a biotech trade association I knew from my days in the Senate. Then on to the Bush Administration, based in large part on connections and relationships built in the Senate and coordinating with the 2000 Bush campaign. That positioned me to later join Premera Blue Cross, and on to where I am today.

Along the way I built a public voice as a Republican and on the right. I ran for, won, and served in a non-partisan office, where my partisan bona fides were well known. I wrote guest op-ed columns and letters to the editor in the Seattle media market arguing for conservative policy solutions. I ended up being the most prolific writer at the leading right-of-center political blog in Washington state during the 2008 campaign cycle.

Both my profession and my voice were Republican. That was me.

Then Trump happened. I functionally left the GOP when we became the nominee in 2016. My thoughts were clear then that Trump was unfit for office. That proved accurate.

I voted for a Democrat for President for the first time ever in 2020. I even did videos for (Bush) 43 Alumni for Biden and Republican Voters Against Trump that were on social media and a swing state TV ad. Trump was that bad as President.

And that was before January 6th. No matter how many times the Trump supporters and the anti-anti-Trump crowd try to minimize that day, it was a singularly disqualifying event. Donald J. Trump should never be near ANY public office ever again.

I also haven’t loved Joe Biden as President. I happily endorsed and voted for him over Trump. I like a number of things, but definitely not all, he has done as President, including support for Ukraine, rebuilding our NATO alliances, and more. I also decided never to vote for him again – if he was running against anyone not named Trump – after the disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan and the pathetic public handling of that debacle. 

And we all saw what happened with Biden’s elderly decline.

I was ready to still vote for a lesser version of Biden over Trump, but happy he stepped aside. I knew for reasons of campaign logistics and calendar reality that Kamala Harris was the only realistic option to replace Biden on the ticket at the time he bowed out; everything else was a West Wing fantasy.

But I wasn’t initially thrilled about Harris as the nominee, purely from the standpoint of beating Trump. Her 2020 primary campaign for President was bad, on multiple levels, ranging from ideological positioning to staff and candidate performance. Her record as a Senator from California was run-of-the-mill Democratic. And her time as VP has not been noteworthy.

She has since surprised me. 

One of the first clear changes from Biden to Harris was the tone and substance of campaign messaging. While most of the campaign staff remains the same outside of the most senior level, the immediate difference was clear: punchier, more direct, and more…modern. 

One can joke about “brat summer” but the campaign leaning into that, as well as labeling Trump & JD Vance “weird,” said a lot. Especially after the unifying factor in the GOP losing highly winnable races in 2022 was general election voters determining Trumpy candidates like Kari Lake and Blake Masters and Doug Mastriano were, well, too damn weird.

Then came the candidate herself. Aside the from the radical change in vibe from the Biden campaign, came an energetic, joyful warrior in place of a defensive old fellow who had lost a step. 

Joy. 

It’s been a hot minute since that word was part of our political lexicon.

But, joy it is. A joyful top of the ticket. A joyful VP selection. And, damn, those rally crowds. The largest majority in American politics today is not Republican or Democratic, it is the anti-Trump coalition. And holy hell is an important part of that coalition energized. Gone is the gloom of an unenthusiastic vote for a weak Biden candidacy, here today is the joy of a better option against Trump.

And that’s really what Kamala Harris was for me: a better option against Trump. Then came her speech at the Democratic Convention. Big swaths of that speech spoke to love of country, passion for America, and a strong foreign policy. She sounded at times like George W. Bush or Mitt Romney:

It is now our turn to do what generations before us have done, guided by optimism and faith, to fight for this country we love. To fight for the ideals we cherish, and to uphold the awesome responsibility that comes with the greatest privilege on Earth: the privilege and pride of being an American!

Who let the ghost of Ronald Reagan into the Democratic Convention hall?

But, there’s more:

I love our country with all my heart. … Let us show each other and the world who we are, and what we stand for. Freedom. Opportunity. Compassion. Dignity. Let us write the next great chapter in the most extraordinary story ever told!

I can vote for someone carrying that message instead of Donald Trump, who can’t shut up about what a garbage can he thinks America is? Yes, please.

And here’s where I speak directly to my fellow former and current Republicans who find themselves feeling politically homeless these days. We’re not just getting an alternative to voting for Trump. We’re getting an alternative who is articulating part of the core spirt of the party we once loved. Instead of the dictator-curious Trump, we can have this:

I will not cozy up to dictators like Kim Jong-un who are rooting for Trump. Who are ROOTING for Trump! … They know Trump won’t hold autocrats accountable because he wants to be an autocrat himself. As President, I will never waver in defense of Americans’ security and ideals. Because in the enduring struggle between democracy and tyranny, I know where I stand, and I know where the United States belongs!

Her delivery and passion make the point real, even more so than those still powerful words. Throw in statements from Harris of support Ukraine and NATO and some tough talk on Iran and its proxies in the Middle East (all of which she *chose* to have in that speech), and:

Some of my friends on the right may protest that some of the policies a Kamala Harris administration will be distasteful to conservatives. Yes, some, of course. But are we willing to accept someone who loves America, loves democracy, and sounds a helluva lot more like a national security conservative than the current GOP nominee? I am.

(And that’s before we get to the brain dead, 18th century mercantilist view Trump has on tariffs, which he has turned into a core part of of his economic platform. Tariffs – aka taxes on all Americans who buy things – so obnoxious in their trade war potential they make the Great Depression-related Smoot-Hawley Tariff blush).

Donald Trump is unfit to serve in elected office, let alone in the Oval Office. Deep down inside we all know that.

We also have a debate between Trump and Harris under our belt. Remember that? As Jake Tapper said after, Trump’s performance was “like a 4chan post come to life” … from crazy internet rumors about pet eating migrants to lunacy about 2020 to defending January 6th, Trump was an angry, crazy old man. Harris articulated a pro-democracy, pro-Ukraine, and pro-NATO message while baiting the orange man into defending his crowd sizes and assorted internet conspiracies because Donald Trump is an emotional toddler.

In 2016, I took the easy path and voted 3rd party. In 2020, I chose a harder one, actively campaigning and voting for Joe Biden. In 2024, I want you to know, it’s ok to join me and Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger and Joe Walsh and Dick Cheney and hundreds of alumni of working for George W. Bush and John McCain and Mitt Romney, and many more Republicans Against Trump who said “no”…and not only “no,” but yes to the alternative. Yes to Kamala Harris, because America is worth it.

Kamala cited that alumni group in the debate. That night proved our point. She’s the better choice.

If you’re still hesitating, I give you the courage of women.

Who has had the greatest moral clarity and courage as a conservative in opposing Donald Trump after the bullshit that led to January 6th? Liz Cheney.

This October 3rd, she joined Kamala Harris at a campaign event in Ripon, WI, the birthplace of the Republican Party in 1854. The people that started what became the GOP did so over a cause of moral clarity: slavery. Fitting location for a call now for moral clarity as well.

I ask all of you here and everyone listening across this great country to join us. I ask you to meet this moment. I ask you to stand in truth to reject the depraved cruelty of Donald Trump and I ask you instead to help us elect Kamala Harris for President.

Let me talk about three more women meeting this moment. Younger women. Women who worked for Donald Trump, in direct West Wing roles: Alyssa Farah Griffin, former White House Director of Communications, Sarah Matthews, former White House Deputy Press Secretary, and Cassidy Hutchinson, former aide to White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows. Notably, all three worked in the White House on January 6th. They all joined Liz Cheney in Pennsylvania this October 10th with a clear message: we worked for Donald Trump in the White House, he’s unfit and we refuse to vote for him again.

Left to right: Liz Cheney, Cassidy Hutchinson, Sarah Matthews, Alyssa Farah Griffin. (Photo Credit: CNN)

More recently Liz Cheney campaigned with Kamala Harris on October 21st at events in Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin, with what is ultimately a simple, clear message:

I say again to my friend’s on the right. It’s ok. The water is warm. Your conscience will thank you. I have seen a number of you take the step already this year. More of you are ready to. You don’t even have to say it out loud, you just have to vote. And years from now you’ll look back with honor rather than shame on this choice.

Join me in voting for Kamala Harris.