From Daily Kos <[email protected]>
Subject Why ICE has become the least popular federal agency
Date January 13, 2026 7:29 PM
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Abolish ICE? America is warming to the idea.



For years, calls from liberals to abolish Immigration and Customs Enforcement
were political poison. Much like “defund the police,” the slogan polled
terribly, weighed down by a widespread belief that ICE existed to identify and
deport dangerous criminals.

Republicans leaned hard into that framing, warning that dismantling the agency
would mean allowing violent offenders to roam free. Even as President Donald
Trump escalated his rhetoric toward “mass deportations,” most Americans
continued to assume that enforcement would focus on serious crimes, not
ordinary immigrants and certainly not U.S. citizens.

That assumption is collapsing.








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A growing body of evidence suggests that Americans are no longer evaluating
ICE as an abstract law-enforcement agency but instead as a visible, often
brutal presence in everyday life. This hit an inflection point last Wednesday,
when an ICE agent fatally shot Renee Good, an unarmed 37-year-old mother. Her
outrageous killing landed amid a deluge of viral videos and firsthand accounts
of other ICE abuses, reshaping public opinion quickly and profoundly.

ICE is now the least popular of nine federal agencies tested and the only one
with net-negative favorability, according to a new YouGov survey that entered
the field two days after Good’s killing. Just 40% of Americans have a favorable
view of the agency, while 51% view it unfavorably. Intensity matters here: Only
a quarter feels very favorable toward ICE, while 40% feel very unfavorably
about it.

Those numbers reflect more than vague discontent. Majorities believe ICE
routinely harms innocent people. Sixty percent say ICE at least sometimes
arrests American citizens who have committed no crimes, and 51% believe the
agency deports innocent citizens at least sometimes. While some respondents may
not be parsing the legal distinction between citizens and noncitizens, the
broader conclusion is unmistakable: Americans believe ICE is sweeping up people
who do not deserve to be targeted at all.

Concerns about the agency’s conduct extend even further. Forty-two percent of
Americans say ICE uses unnecessary force “often,” and another 18% say it does
so “sometimes.” Nearly 7 in 10 believe agents should be required to wear
uniforms while making arrests, and a majority (55%) oppose officers hiding
their identities behind masks. And when it comes to people killed by ICE agents
or who died in the agency’s custody, 56% agree that those deaths “show that
there is a fundamental problem with ICE that needs to be fixed.”

Overall, support for protests against the agency outweighs opposition, 49% to
41%.

Perhaps most striking is how far public opinion has moved toward
accountability. By a lopsided margin, Americans say ICE needs stricter
recruitment standards. Almost 60% support criminal prosecution for ICE agents
who kill someone, and there is even modest support for shrinking the agency’s
overall size. These are not fringe positions. They are mainstream judgments
about an institution many Americans once barely thought about at all.









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The one line that still has not been crossed, though, is abolition itself.
YouGov finds the public’s opposition (45%) to eliminating ICE narrowly exceeds
support (42%).

But even that resistance is eroding rapidly. Shortly before the 2024
presidential election, when Trump’s dehumanizing attacks on immigrants
dominated the news, support for ICE peaked, with just 19% of registered voters
favoring abolition and 66% opposed, according to data from Civiqs. As of this
past Thursday—the newest data—42% support abolishing the agency and 50% oppose
it, representing a seismic shift in public opinion.

That shift has coincided with a steady stream of abuses captured on video and
shared widely online. Footage of masked agents pulling people into unmarked
vehicles, accounts of families torn apart during raids, and abuses involving
U.S. citizens have made ICE feel less like a distant bureaucracy and more like
an unpredictable and malignant force operating in plain sight.

And how long can conservatives continue to excuse behavior like this, when
their entire philosophy boils down to “you can’t trust the government”?

This is Trump’s America, and few people are comfortable with it. The more they
see it, the further those numbers drop.



Click here to check out this story on DailyKos.com.
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