(OREGON) — Rep. Maxine Dexter compared President Trump’s immigration enforcement crackdown to “terrorism” at a town hall at Wy’east Middle School on Saturday, February 21, 2026, and promised to “dismantle and abolish ICE altogether” if Democrats regain political power.
Dexter, a Democrat from Oregon, described ICE in stark terms during the event, calling it “The frank terrorism that is being invoked” by the agency.
Her remarks spread beyond Oregon and drew national attention, with supporters embracing her call and critics rejecting the comparison and the abolition pledge.
The sharp rhetoric came after the January 2026 fatal shootings of two U.S. civilians in Minneapolis by federal immigration officials, an episode that lawmakers referenced as they pressed for changes to enforcement tactics.
Federal immigration officials fatally shot Renee Nicole Good and Alex Pretti, the news cycle cited by lawmakers reported. The killings sparked nationwide protests and renewed Democratic demands for oversight and reform of ICE operations.
The Minneapolis shootings became a catalyst in broader arguments over ICE tactics and accountability, as Democrats pointed to the deaths while urging new limits on how agents operate in public.
Dexter aligned herself with Democrats who opposed Department of Homeland Security funding bills unless they included changes to enforcement. That opposition helped drive a partial government shutdown that began February 14, 2026, after Senate Democrats blocked advancement.
Several House Democrats echoed Dexter’s language or went further, describing ICE actions as terror-like or arguing the agency should be dismantled as part of a larger restructuring of federal immigration enforcement.
Rep. Delia C. Ramirez, a Democrat from Illinois, called for “MELT ICE and dismantle DHS,” while arguing the department’s post-9/11 origins made it a tool for rights violations. Ramirez co-sponsored the Melt ICE Act with Rep. Yvette Clarke, a Democrat from New York.
Rep. Paul Tonko, a Democrat from New York, described Trump’s “private army of masked ICE agents” as a “brutal campaign of terror,” and demanded the firing of DHS Secretary Kristi Noem.
Rep. Janelle Bynum, a Democrat from Oregon, labeled ICE “state-sponsored terrorism.” Other Democrats, including Reps. Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts, Summer Lee of Pennsylvania and Laura Friedman of California, accused ICE of “terrorizing communities” and being a “rogue agency.”
Alongside the rhetoric, Democrats attached specific operational demands to DHS funding, arguing that changes in day-to-day enforcement would reduce risks to public safety, civil liberties and community trust.
The proposed conditions included an end to roaming patrols and what Democrats called “dragnet operations,” along with a ban on masks and a requirement for visible identification badges for agents.
Lawmakers also pushed for stiffer warrant requirements for public detentions, tying the idea to concerns about how quickly enforcement encounters can escalate in public places.
Another demand called for body cameras and independent investigations into killings connected to enforcement encounters, placing accountability mechanisms at the center of the party’s internal debate.
Democrats also urged a redirection of enforcement toward the border and criminals, while avoiding operations near sensitive locations such as schools, hospitals and places of worship.
Funding fights amplified those policy demands, turning short-term government financing votes into leverage points as lawmakers sought to attach limits, training and oversight to DHS appropriations.
A temporary funding deal ended a prior shutdown, but gridlock returned. On February 3, 2026, 21 House Democrats voted with Republicans to reopen government for two weeks.
The shutdown politics exposed divisions inside the party, with some Democrats insisting on reforms tied to training and accountability systems, and others arguing ICE’s structure and mission make it irredeemable.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, a Democrat from New York, pushed to “Reform” ICE through training and body cameras, while House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, a Democrat from New York, backed enhanced training and a body camera mandate.
Sen. Ed Markey, a Democrat from Massachusetts, called to “Defund and abolish ICE,” and said he planned to vote no on DHS funding. Rep. Seth Moulton, a Democrat from Massachusetts, said “ICE is beyond repair” and should be abolished, while urging prosecutors to prioritize cases against agents.
Sen. Chris Murphy, a Democrat from Connecticut, signaled openness to compromise while criticizing a “lawless” DHS. Sen. Tina Smith, a Democrat from Minnesota, argued ICE agents must follow local police rules for accountability.
Legal challenges added another front to the political battle over enforcement and oversight. A lawsuit filed Monday, February 23, 2026, in Maine federal district court by Protect Democracy alleges ICE labels observers of enforcement as “domestic terrorists,” forcing them to abandon recording rights.
The litigation and the language from lawmakers have fed competing Democratic arguments, with some pressing for operational guardrails such as identification requirements and independent investigations, and others pointing to the same controversies as reasons to abolish the agency.
With the 2026 midterms approaching, Democrats have used immigration enforcement as a rallying message against Trump’s agenda, which the material described as being led by Border Czar Tom Homan.
Maxine Dexter Vows to Abolish ICE Over Trump’s Immigration Crackdown at Wy’east Middle School in Minneapolis
Democratic lawmakers are escalating their opposition to President Trump’s immigration crackdown following fatal shootings in Minneapolis. Representative Maxine Dexter and others have used ‘terrorism’ rhetoric to describe ICE operations, leading to calls for dismantling the agency. While leadership pushes for reforms like body cameras and identification mandates, the progressive wing demands total abolition, fueling a government shutdown and intense debates over DHS funding and oversight.
