“As an adjudicated insurrectionist, Trump is an illegitimate president according to Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, and therefore every official act as president will be illegitimate.”
–Mike Zonta, co-editor of OccupySF.net
The 14th Amendment states: “No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any state, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any state legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any state, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may, by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.”
Call your Congressperson and your U.S. Senators at (202) 224-3121
This online forum watch party features activists who will discuss how predatory behavior by the leader of the United Farm Workers was hidden for decades and how organizations can prevent such tragedies.
Speakers: Desirèe Rojas – labor organizer and daughter of UFW cofounder Albert Rojas; Martha Cotera – a leader of La Raza Unida Party in the 1970s (Austin); Yolanda Alaniz – former farmworker and historian of UFW (Los Angeles); Yuisa Alegria-Gimeno – queer feminist and LA County worker
An urgent protest is called for Sunday, May 31 in San Francisco against a likely U.S. military attack on Cuba. Already, 5 months of a total oil blockade has devastated the economy, causing unprecedented suffering for the people. The recent indictment of Raul Castro by the United States Department of Justice is a shameful injustice and pretext for an unprovoked war on Cuba.
Now is the time to stand together and stop this war before it starts. Join us in San Francisco! Bring your signs and banners!
5. Monday, 8:00am – 12Noon, Court Support for Stop AI Activist
Court House 400 McAllister (Dept. 503) SF
Support activist Wynd Kaufmyn who is being tried for non-violent civil disobedience against Sam Altman’s company OpenAI. Come to SF City Hall for Press Conference and walk across the street to SF Superior Courthouse at 400 McAllister St, Dept. 503 for Trial. Wear red or come with signs! There will be a sign-making station and a table to leave signs during the trial if you want to keep them.
In a historic, first-of-its-kind trial, a member of the group StopAI is facing charges for blockading the doors of OpenAI. OpenAI’s product, ChatGPT, has already been implicated in user suicides and mass shootings, demonstrating its potential for lethal harm. Mass layoffs, AI psychosis, war crimes, dystopian levels of surveillance, and loss of human control are growing threats from AI likely to culminate in catastrophic global harms.
Wynd asserts her actions were necessary to prevent imminent harm from OpenAI’s reckless development of AI. The necessity defense was used in 2018 when a Boston Municipal Judge acquitted 13 climate activists who blocked a fracked gas pipeline. The judge found the activists not guilty on the basis of necessity. Wynd needs support to establish this precedent for AI.
7. Tuesday, 8:00am – 10:00am, No More Genocide! Protest at Microsoft Conference
Fort Mason Center SF
RALLY AGAINST MICROSOFT CONFERENCE Tuesday, June 2nd 8 AM Fort Mason Center, San Francisco
No Azure for Apartheid, the campaign by current and former Microsoft workers against Microsoft’s cloud and AI contracts with the Israeli military and government, is mobilizing on June 2nd for a community rally against Microsoft Build conference!
Microsoft is expecting a few thousand attendees to show up to this conference where they plan to showcase their latest cloud and AI developments, all while those same technologies are sold as digital weapons to the Israeli military and government to fuel occupation, apartheid, and genocide. The speakers for this event include Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella as well as former IOF soldiers giving talks about cloud and AI throughout the event. Let’s turn up and show Microsoft that there will be no business as usual while Microsoft and its execs have blood on their hands!
NO TECH FOR GENOCIDE! IOF OFF AZURE! DIGITAL ARMS EMBARGO NOW!
California is preparing to share DMV records through a third-party database system, potentially exposing sensitive personal information to federal agencies, including ICE and the Trump administration.
This plan puts all our data at risk, especially immigrants, trans people, and anyone who could be targeted because of their identity or because they disagree with the administration.
The shared data will include whether a driver has a Social Security number, which could be used to compile bulk lists of undocumented drivers and their addresses. This data sharing would shatter California’s decade-long promise to protect the personal information of more than one million immigrant drivers.
Join Bay Resistance and community partners as we demand transparency, privacy protections, and a firewall around Californians’ personal data.
9. Thursday, 4:00pm – 6:00pm, Tell Target to Stand Up To ICE!
Metreon Target:
789 Mission Street. Meet on the sidewalk by the Mission Street entrance. SF
Tell Target: We will boycott until they Stand Up To ICE!
Join us to say: Until Target acts to protect its workers and guests from ICE, we will not shop at Target! We will hold signs, hand out flyers, and explain why we must all boycott Target until they Stand Up To ICE. Bring a sign if you have one.
Bank Warns Trump’s War Could Trigger Global Catastrophe by Raw America
Journalists unite to stop MAGA billionaire’s planned acquisition of CNN, Republican confronted by angry constituents at town hall, Murdoch paper blasts Trump’s corruption. Video and Read on Substack.
The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) said in a yet-to-be-published proposed rule Friday that it’s drawing up plans to radically crack down on mail voting by sending ballots only to voters who are registered with the federal government.
The proposed rule, which will be formally published next week, is an alarming step toward implementing President Donald Trump’s sweeping attack on mail voting ahead of the 2026 midterm election. And it would represent a massive expansion of federal control over voting, without congressional authorization.
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Trump signed a sweeping executive order in March that, in part, ordered the Postal Service to only send mail ballots to voters on lists created and controlled by the federal government.
The order is currently the subject of multiple lawsuits. USPS’s proposed rule came a day after a federal judge overseeing one of the lawsuits declined to block the order. The judge concluded the plaintiffs lacked standing to challenge the order since federal agencies had not yet taken steps to implement it.
Now, that appears to have changed.
USPS is moving forward with the order even though legal experts and voting rights organizations have warned that it is a blatantly unconstitutional attempt to restrict the right to vote and usurp states’ authority over elections.
Under the Constitution, states run elections and only Congress can set national standards.
The proposed rule would require state election officials to send USPS a list of voters who have requested a mail-in or absentee ballot at least 30 days before ballots are sent out under state law. If voters aren’t on the list, they will not receive a ballot.
It also allows state officials to make “supplemental submissions to enroll additional individuals or modify prior submissions until the last day that ballots may be mailed out to individuals under state law.”
In this way, that provision tacitly admits that it will lead to errors that need to be fixed, whether through “supplemental submissions” or modifying “prior submissions.”
Those errors, caused by a new federal government program that is not explicitly authorized by Congress, are precisely the kind of harm the plaintiffs challenging the executive order seek to prevent.
In their lawsuits, Democrats and voting-rights advocates argued that using USPS’s list, as well as other federal registration lists included in Trump’s order, would lead to eligible voters being unable to cast ballots. In part, that’s because the lists would rely on Department of Homeland Security databases that have been shown to have serious flaws.
USPS also said the names of mail voters would be associated with a “unique barcode” that is assigned to their ballot. It claimed that the barcode would “help determine adherence to federal law and facilitate law enforcement efforts.”
Justin Levitt, a law professor at Loyola Marymount University and a former deputy assistant attorney general at the Department of Justice (DOJ), said in a social media post Friday that the proposed rule was a move toward Trump’s order being ruled unconstitutional.
“One step closer to standing, which means one step closer to an end to this charade,” Levitt said, referring to U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols’s ruling Thursday.
While Nichols did not necessarily disagree with Democrats and pro-voting groups that Trump’s order could be unlawful, he said they couldn’t show that they had been harmed by it because federal agencies hadn’t acted on the directives.
In fact, though he was rejecting the plaintiffs’ request for a permanent injunction against the order, Nichols specified that his decision was actually a message for the Trump administration to act in order to give the plaintiffs standing to sue.
“It is not aimed at [the plaintiffs] but instead tells only the agencies to do something,” Nichols, a Trump appointee, said of his decision.
The Postal Service did not immediately respond to Democracy Docket’s request for comment.
Friday was the deadline Trump included in his order for Postmaster General David Steiner to initiate a rulemaking process to formally implement the president’s mail voting restrictions.
In recent weeks, Steiner, who also serves as CEO of USPS, has met with other senior Trump administration and DOJ officials to discuss ways to implement the order.
This story has been updated with new details throughout.
San Francisco Public Press May 27, 2026 Civic JPhoto Credit: Michelle Liu Civic Special – San Franciscans will decide on June 2nd whether to tax corporations whose CEOs make 100 times the median salary of their lowest paid workers or raise a more modest tax on larger businesses. San Francisco Public Press Executive Director Lila LaHood moderated the discussion between David Harrison, Director of Public Policy For the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce and Kim Tavaglione, Executive Director of the San Francisco Labor Council at KALW radio’s public space in downtown San Francisco. Show Notes: June 2026 San Francisco Public Press Election Guide SFPublicPress.org Yes on D campaign San Francisco Chamber of Commerce Voter Guide
A protestor with an American flag walks towards a police line during a protest against federal immigration arrests, on June 11, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. Protests against ICE raids have spread to cities across the nation after beginning in Los Angeles last weekend.
(Photo by Rio Giancarlo/Getty Images)
“We were guinea pigs,” said the father of one of the convicted protesters. “They brought the swamp of Washington, DC, into our area to stop American citizens from exercising our rights that are guaranteed.”
With the conviction of three anti-ICE protesters in Spokane, Washington on federal “conspiracy” charges Thursday, civil rights advocates and legal experts fear that the Trump administration may have just been handed a powerful tool to criminalize dissent.
Jac Archer, Justice Forral, and Bajun Mavalwalla II, nicknamed the “Spokane 3,” were indicted last year for their actions at a protest in June 2025, where they attempted to physically obstruct ICE agents from transporting two Venezuelan immigrants to an ICE processing facility in Tacoma.
Both of the men reportedly entered the US legally under a humanitarian parole program that had been terminated by the Trump administration, leading advocates to protest their detention.
As Spokesman-Review, a Spokane newspaper, described:
Protesters that day eventually began linking arms around vans and in front of agents’ cars. The event grew chaotic. ICE agents entered a crowd of people standing outside the facility’s parking lot gate and began grabbing people by the necks and arms, pushing them to the ground. Protesters also slashed tires of vans meant to transport the detainees.
But where such activity would usually lead to charges against specific protesters for discrete illegal actions like trespassing, property damage, or other public order offenses, the Department of Justice (DOJ)—as part of a nationwide effort to crack down on protests against ICE—charged nine protesters with “conspiracy to impede or injure officers,” even though no officers were actually injured during the protest.
Legal experts described it as a novel approach that wrapped many people involved in the protest into a single “conspiracy” regardless of whether they committed specific criminal acts.
“Usually if a protest gets out of hand and people are hurt or property is hurt, you see charges based on that,” Mary Fan, a former federal prosecutor and a University of Washington law professor, told The New York Times earlier this month. “They’re not going after people based on specific harm done. They’re stretching conspiracy charges to target protesters and people who organize protests.”
Facing pressure from the federal government to bring the case following a national memo sent from the DOJ to prioritize and publicize cases against ICE agents, then-acting US Attorney for Eastern Washington Richard Barker resigned last year rather than bring charges against the protesters.
He said at the time he was grateful he “never had to sign an indictment or file a brief that [he] didn’t believe in.” His successor, Stephanie Van Marter, however, did sign the order.
Six of the defendants pleaded guilty to the charges to avoid federal prison time. But Archer, Forral, and Mavalwalla chose to fight them, believing the case was part of an unjust attempt to criminalize their right to protest.
After a trial that lasted seven days, a jury found the three defendants guilty of conspiracy. But the defense has argued that the trial was marred by problems that rendered the verdict faulty.
In February, a federal judge ordered the release of a Venezuelan migrant whose transportation for deportation the protesters sought to block, ruling his arrest violated the constitution.
But the jury, drawn from conservative eastern Washington state, did not hear those facts at trial, thanks to rulings by Judge [Rebecca] Pennell. Pennell, a former federal public defender and appointee of the Democratic president Joe Biden, also ruled the protesters on trial could not use the First Amendment as a defense, though they were allowed to state their reasons for demonstrating.
Instead, the jury watched hours of law enforcement body camera video and heard from a parade of ICE agents… Jeremy Burlingame, an ICE agent who testified, had authored social media posts that called Black politicians “lying ghetto garbage” and transgender people “mentally ill.” He boosted a post showing ICE arresting a pregnant woman at gunpoint that called her a “pregnant invader.”
Federal prosecutors deemed the posts troubling enough to recall Burlingame to impeach him, despite the fact that he was their witness…
But Burlingame’s online posts, the lack of injury to ICE officers, and the absence of evidence showing communication between the three defendants prior to the protest were not enough to sway the jury.
The defendants now face potential sentences of up to six years in prison and a $250,000 fine. However, they are expected to appeal the verdict and have filed a rarely used motion allowing their attorneys to argue that no rational juror could find their clients guilty.
“I question whether justice truly was served by today’s verdict,” Barker told the Spokesman-Review. “This was the first conspiracy prosecution in Eastern Washington history under… a Civil War-era law dusted off to punish members of the Spokane community who stood up for two young men who were unlawfully detained by ICE.”
https://www.youtube.com/embed/KxDZ1COUEyk?rel=0Video by KREM 2 News/Youtube
Looking beyond the details of the trial itself, many observers questioned the very premise of the DOJ’s prosecution.
Spokane Mayor Lisa Brown said from the start of the trial she believed it was “politically motivated.”
“It was meant to make an example out of people who disagreed with federal immigration policy,” she said.
City council member Sarah Dixit, who said she took part in the protest, said: “Based on the evidence that was shown, I personally didn’t see evidence of what they were accused of. Conspiracy is a charge that feels complicated to prove, and I don’t believe that the government made a strong case for that.”
Others expressed fear for the precedent that had been set. La Rond Baker, the legal director of the Washington ACLU, said the Trump administration “has a demonstrable history of using the Department of Justice to silence and punish its critics.”
The administration has pursued similar sweeping conspiracy charges against other groups of anti-ICE protesters around the country—including in Los Angeles, Broadview, Illinois, and North Texas.
“The verdict was painfully disappointing,” said Archer’s attorney, Carl Oreskovich. “I think it was an extraordinarily aggressive approach to prosecution of protests. And it certainly is going to chill people who want to utilize their First Amendment right to dissent against government actions that they don’t agree with.”
In a comment to The Guardian, Robert Chang, a law professor at the University of California, Irvine School of Law and executive director of its Fred T. Korematsu Center for Law and Equality, said the verdict was “frightening.”
“By this logic, any protest could be a conspiracy,” he said. “The goal posts keep moving.”
Bajun Mavalwalla Sr., a retired US Army intelligence officer who served in Afghanistan, said his son—also a veteran of the same war—and the other two defendants were standing for “the freedoms that separate this country from the dictatorships.”
“People in Spokane and people in Eastern Washington need to understand that we were guinea pigs. That they brought the swamp of Washington, DC, into our area to stop American citizens from exercising our rights that are guaranteed,” the elder Mavalwalla said after his son was convicted.
“It was the whole point of the Constitution, the right to protest, the right to dissent, the right to assemble, all of those things are now in question because of this case,” he said. “My son has taken the brunt of the entire weight of the United States government onto their shoulders.”
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In a new Journal of Democracy online exclusive, Javier Corrales and Susan Stokes argue that there five ways that aspiring autocrats are typically shown the door. And the good news is that it’s usually at the hands of voters. Read this and all our latest online exclusives, plus — for a limited time — four seminal essays by top experts on democratic backsliding.
Viktor Orbán election defeat last month stunned many people. But in truth it’s not uncommon for would-be autocrats to lose at the ballot box. It’s a more hopeful picture than many people realize.
Ethiopia’s elections are more like performative rituals than democratic contests. But these hollow exercises are becoming more dangerous as the country stares down a series of looming threats.
The Chinese Communist Party has sought to control the Tibetan people by attacking their religious leaders. But the strategy has failed. Faith can’t be commanded or coerced.
When democracies pass laws against hate speech and extremism, they are giving autocrats the cover they need for their own crackdowns. We shouldn’t let democratic norms become a blueprint for repression.
President Erdoğan’s rule has grown more repressive as he realizes he has no democratic path to power. But we are united in our resolve and determined to make Turkey a democratic republic worthy of its people.
Old-fashioned military coups and blatant election-day fraud are becoming mercifully rarer these days, but other, subtler forms of democratic regression are a growing problem that demands more attention.
Today, the principal challenge to democracy is coming not from coups but from democratic erosion driven by elected leaders. What is behind this shift, and how can prodemocracy forces push back?
If democracies did a better job “delivering” for their citizens, so the thinking goes, people would not be so ready to embrace antidemocratic alternatives. Not so. This conventional wisdom about democratic backsliding is seldom true and often not accurate at all.
Can we recognize the symptoms of backsliding before it’s too late? Though the signals are sometimes faint, a new study of sixteen cases around the world reveals key dynamics common to all.
Credit: Photo illustration by Michael J. Hentz. Sources: Ashlee Rezin/Chicago Sun-Times via AP; Damian Dovarganes/AP Photo; Matt Pierce/iStock; FG Trade Latin/iStock.
The seeds of an authoritarian state will still be there unless the United States reckons with its own fascist past and how that relates to Stephen Miller’s vision for the future.
This article appears in the June 2026 issue of The American Prospect magazine.If you’d like to receive our next issue in your mailbox, please subscribe here.
Despite what Republicans and some mainstream Democrats would have us believe, half of Americans agree that ICE should no longer exist. Progressive candidates across the country have taken note and are using “Abolish ICE” as a rallying cry to organize their communities and win elections.
Rep. Analilia Mejía (D-NJ) is one such progressive. She campaigned on abolishing ICE against ten other candidates, some of whom had raised much more money, and won her primary and then the special election. The day after she was sworn in, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) announced Mejía’s appointment to the House Committee on Homeland Security, the body that oversees ICE and the Trump regime’s immigration terror campaign, joining others on the committee who have called forICE’s abolishment and redirecting funding to community-based organizations.
Shortly after her appointment, Mejía participated in a hearing of the Homeland Security Committee, asking witnesses whom immigration agents had shot and assaulted what “meaningful actions” lawmakers could take to bring them justice. Most said they wanted accountability for the agents who hurt them. But the Rev. David Black, senior pastor of First Presbyterian Church of Chicago, whom federal immigration agents shot multiple times in the head, face, and body with pepper balls and shoved to the ground when he protested outside an ICE prison in Broadview, Illinois, last year, had a different answer.
“With respect to the members who believe in reform, I believe that this department and administration really need an exorcist. That’s my opinion as a pastor,” he said. “I would like people to understand in this Congress and in the United States, that what we are facing, the evil we are facing from this administration, goes beyond political solutions and goes beyond reform. It requires spiritual solutions.”
Some Democrats have been more circumspect in the face of ICE’s terror or have retreated to weasel words that fall short of wholesale reform. Rep. Dan Goldman (D-NY), for example, wants to “abolish ICE as we know it.” Political leaders like this have failed to fully internalize the political project of White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller and his intellectual allies in the Trump administration. They mean to have the federal government fund, arm, equip, and train a paramilitary force to roam the country as it pleases, with few or no checks on its power. They mean to institutionalize an entity that is incompatible with democracy.
Stephen Miller and his allies in the Trump administration mean to institutionalize an entity that is incompatible with democracy.
The clearest indication of Miller’s desire was when he went on state media—Fox News—last fall and gave these men with guns a directive. “To all ICE officers: You have federal immunity in the conduct of your duties. And anybody who lays a hand on you or tries to stop you or tries to obstruct you is committing a felony,” Miller said. “No one—no city official, no state official, no illegal alien, no leftist agitator or domestic insurrectionist—can prevent you from fulfilling your legal obligations and duties.”
Miller made these comments three months before agents killed Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis; the Department of Homeland Security shared Miller’s clip on X after the Good murder, as if to confirm ICE sat beyond the reach of the law. It was a matter of time until Miller’s concept would result in death.
Scholars who study authoritarian and fascist regimes may not be calling for an exorcism or spiritual renewal. But they do say that simply erasing institutions that embody such ideologies is not enough to escape them. Inevitably, authoritarianism will more easily return if the structures that enable it remain in place, just as Jonathan Ross, the ICE officer who killed Renee Good, was reassigned to another part of the bureaucracy.
They also say that while it is tempting for Americans to look to places like Argentina, Germany, or Italy for guidance, those are poor comparisons for what’s going on in America today. Instead, they suggest revisiting America’s own history, when enough people decided to take the nation away from its genocidal, slave-owning genesis, fought a war that left 620,000 dead—more than any other war in U.S. history—and then spent a century struggling to end Jim Crow laws that oppressed Black people.
“Abolishing ICE is probably not that hard,” said Yanilda María González, assistant professor of public policy at the Harvard Kennedy School, who studies authoritarianism. “Agencies get abolished all the time.”
ICE IS A MODERN INVENTION. Its creation abolished a different immigration agency, the Immigration and Naturalization Service, when lawmakers overwhelmingly passed the 2002 Homeland Security Act following 9/11. That law was ostensibly meant to stop future attacks from terrorists, and all but ten senators voted for it. (Frank Murkowski, Republican from Alaska, did not cast a vote.) Enacted through democratic processes, the new law handed racist authoritarians a tool with which to terrorize immigrants, drive them underground, strip them of basic human rights, and facilitate an easily abused workforce.
The evolution of the Homeland Security Act from a response to 9/11 to one facing inward came within a matter of years. The law held that ICE would answer to the new Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and be responsible for enforcing immigration law, investigating the illegal movement of people and goods, and preventing terrorism. The agency it replaced had answered to the Department of Justice.
ICE had an initial budget of $3.3 billion. Funding for the new agency crept upward for years and under President Barack Obama was slightly less than $6 billion in 2015. During that fiscal year, the federal government reported that ICE had removed or deported 235,413 people.
Ten years later, the base budget is now roughly $10 billion, but it has been supplemented with a surge of $75 billion in extra funding from the 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Meanwhile, the number of deportations in FY2025 hit 443,000, according to Reuters, up from 271,000 the year before. The Trump administration has stopped issuing detailed statistics on immigration, just as it has stopped issuing timely notices each time someone dies in its immigrant concentration camps. The Prospect’s nonscientific tally listed the names of 55 people who have died in ICE custody as of April 24. Immigration agents have injured dozens of people since the beginning of 2025 and killed at least 28. These are minimum numbers.
Democrats tried to at least hold up the base funding for the 2026 fiscal year, conditioning it on a series of relatively modest reforms. But at the end of April, Republican lawmakers introduced a measure using the party-line budget reconciliation process that would send yet more money to ICE and Customs and Border Protection (CBP): a $70 billion baseline that would fund the agencies through at least the end of President Trump’s term. Because both the surge funding and this baseline funding do not go through the normal appropriations process, this avoids certain guardrails and accountability measures, like time limits on spending and directives about where the money goes. The money becomes a slush fund for abduction, warehousing, deportation, and mass death and injury.
The vast amount of taxpayer wealth handed to immigration enforcement has spread and nurtured violence, beyond abusing immigrants and those trying to protect them. It’s also spawned a massive surveillance network that can spy on anyone, regardless of their immigration status, and acted as a jobs program for violent far-right bigots, whom it recruits with Nazi imagery at gun shows, “Ultimate Fight Club venues, rodeos, martial arts centers, and other haunts for men who tend to have a far right political vision,” as Truthout reported. Homeland Security officials are hiring at such a fast rate that they’re unable to fully vet their new recruits, an AP investigation found, filling the ranks with bankrupt people who are easy to extort and people who have previously been accused of misconduct. The rot that this represents goes beyond the existence of a single governmental agency.
ICE agents have confronted migrants and U.S. citizens alike in courthouses, private homes, and on American streets. Credit: Yuki Iwamura/AP Photo; Olga Fedorova/AP Photo; Anthony Vazquez/Chicago Sun-Times via AP; Michael Nigro/Sipa USA via AP Images
THE IMPLICIT GOAL OF ICE is to eliminate illegal immigration entirely. But immigrants are always going to come into the United States, as North Carolina Justice Center senior attorney Carol Brooke explained. “Unfortunately,” she said, “the economic situation in other countries is such that people will come regardless of how difficult we make it for them while they’re here.”
At some level, Miller and his allies know this. The presence of the paramilitary force is not solely to enforce immigration laws or improve job availability for native-born citizens. It’s to project authoritarian power. And that’s made easier by the fact that such power projection is already all around us.
The brutality of rounding up and kicking out hundreds of thousands of people and imprisoning at least 60,311 (as of April 4) in immigration detention camps has infuriated people across the U.S., who have put themselves physically and financially in danger to protect themselves and their neighbors. Many have wondered how widespread violence conducted by masked agents could happen in the land of the free.
But the surrealism of such a tyrannical force existing within a democratic nation is not as odd as it sounds, González said. Authoritarian enclaves routinely exist within democratic nations, using authoritarian practices, formal rules, and informal norms, including arbitrary detention, torture, and extrajudicial killings. And while the U.S. is accustomed to denouncing these practices in State Department human rights reports, they persist in the United States just as they do in countries that have undergone celebrated transitions to democracy, including Brazil and Argentina.
“Even in the U.S there are all these different ways where the local police departments have operated in authoritarian enclaves,” she said. The emergence of ICE as an institution is just one example, she and other scholars said. Other modern examples include prison and even American workplaces, where employees’ ability to access modern medicine, buy groceries, and pay rent comes to an end if a boss decides to hand out pink slips.
“These authoritarian policies are the outcomes of ordinary democratic policies,” González said. One reason she gave will make average Democratic voters uncomfortable: Some Americans want them. Consider the Trump rallies across the country, at which white supporters held up signs that said “Mass Deportation Now!”
“We have bottom-up societal demand for this violence, for extralegal force,” González said. In Brazil, for example, surveys throughout the years show that the popular phrase “bandido bom é bandido morto,” or “a good criminal is a dead criminal,” routinely drawsbetween 36 and 60 percent agreement. Her own survey found that 40 percent of participants agreed with the phrase. Some tolerate the violence, and some outright support it.
Infrastructure like ICE fulfills this latent desire. “These are demands that end up getting channeled through democratic institutions,” she said. “I’ve sat in committee meetings where citizens applaud when someone says a police officer killed someone. They applaud like, ‘Thank God.’”
That outlook comes from frustrations with crime, feeling unsafe and unprotected, and anger that the government has responded inadequately. Jair Bolsonaro, the far-right former president of Brazil who is now serving a 27-year term for an attempted coup, campaigned on that violence, saying “a police officer who does not kill is not a police officer,” and that cops should get medals for killing. Donald Trump has voiced similar sentiments, suggesting that the government grant police officers “one real rough, nasty” and “violent day” in the style of The Purge, because that would “immediately” end crime. These are appealing statements to people who are afraid and angry about crime, and in the U.S., for people who do not know that overall crime and property offenses across the country have been falling for years.
“People’s frustration with rising crime or a sense of disorder, candidates using this type of really pro-violence rhetoric is not a minus, it’s a plus, it’s not a bug it’s a feature, it’s something that makes people vote for them as opposed to something that would repel voters,” said González. “There are incentives for politicians to make these types of demands.”
Those incentives get a boost from a highly concentrated media apparatus that works in service of regime officials yet brands itself as news, scholars said. Fox News is the standard-bearer of state media, but the propagandistic nature of the news industry is everywhere, laundering the talking points of the political party in power, accepting corporate economic theories as fact, and taking the side of the State Department.
Many have wondered how widespread violence conducted by masked agents could happen in the land of the free.
As civil rights lawyer Alec Karakatsanis points out in his book Copaganda, consuming content from mainstream media outlets that routinely take the side of police skews perceptions (including in subtle ways like using the passive voice to shield cops), makes people feel less safe, and increases their fear of marginalized groups. And as Jeremy Busby writes from a Texas prison, where he is incarcerated, “propaganda can turn people into individuals they would have once despised,” including leading incarcerated people to believe they no longer deserve soap and toilet paper, “and get angry at anyone who did,” after watching enough “law and order” commentary on Fox. He warned that the same is true for anyone: Watch enough anti-democratic propaganda, and “people on the outside may stop believing they deserve democracy.”
These are some of the factors that lead members of a democracy to support authoritarianism, scholars said. Simply replacing ICE, or even the entire DHS, won’t touch the real problem, nor do nations that have rejected full-blown fascist dictatorships hold the answers.
A BETTER SOURCE FOR GUIDANCE, said Alberto Toscano, an adjunct professor at Simon Fraser University’s School of Communication, is to look at the fascism America has already confronted and to the radical Black thinkers who have been doing that since the nation’s founding. He outlined this position in a 2020 column, pointing out that radical Black thinkers have struggled to get white Americans to face the fascism inherent to colonialism and racial slavery for more than a hundred years—“long before Nazi violence came to be conceived of as beyond analogy.”
The American tendency to look for answers abroad ignores that America has already contended with fascists in the form of racist slavers who bought and sold Black people on an industrial scale. It’s one thing to take inspiration from international anti-fascist fights. But imagining oneself as analogous to a member of the French resistance, he said, is “silly.” It’s also a tendency driven by American exceptionalism and emotional fragility, allowing Americans to think of fascism “as a kind of aberration or exception,” Toscano said. “It allows you to think there is something fundamentally positive in the U.S. order.”
That is why, he said, it’s better to study Black radical activists and authors in the U.S., including W.E.B. Du Bois, Langston Hughes, and Angela Davis, and ask, “What are the homegrown forms of racialized fascism and authoritarianism that are baked into U.S. institutions?” It’s not that nothing can be learned from other countries, but thinking about what Europeans did after fascism has limited virtue if you’re not thinking about how the U.S. failed to ever truly transition into a multiracial democracy. Why are white people still trying to disenfranchise Black voters in 2026? Is the U.S. Constitution fundamentally corrupted by existing with slavery for 80 years? The experiences of other countries cannot answer.
“In all those cases you’re talking about the passage from one political order or form of government to another,” said Toscano. “That’s not really the case with the U.S. All of the institutions are in some sense the same. [Trump and Miller have] grown ICE, but Tom Homan was hired and given a medal by Barack Obama … The political and institutional architecture of the U.S. has not been radically transferred, but abused or perverted.”
Toscano added that instead of learning what Americans can learn from Europe after World War II, a better question is what can be learned about the fact that much of the right wing is unhappy about the results of the Civil War. To truly change the future of the United States, he said, the electorate would need to engage in a version of what Rev. Black suggested with his “spiritual solutions.”
“Whatever comes after Trump, if there were a political movement and a shift in government such that the idea would be to really revoke many of the effects of Trumpism in the United States, this would actually involve not returning to the previous status quo but engaging in some serious radical reforms,” Toscano said, such as changing the nature of the Supreme Court or radically rethinking U.S. residency rules, which “have always been authoritarian in its potentiality.”
But, he said, a real discussion of a Third Reconstruction can’t happen if people think the order is good, just taken over by bad people. “That’s the fundamental flaw in the ideology of the mainstream Democratic Party,” Toscano said.
Organizing against mass deportation reflects the active participation in governance needed to upend authoritarianism. Credit: Gabriele Holtermann/Sipa USA via AP Images; Steven Garcia/NurPhoto via AP; Melissa Bender/NurPhoto via AP; The Monitor via AP
FOR MEJÍA, THE ANSWER LIES in organizing. Speaking with the Prospect after the DHS hearing, she agreed that simply getting rid of one agency is not enough, and like Toscano she is drawing inspiration from American civil rights fighters, who used legal challenges, direct actions, boycotts, and protests, while holding their ground against vicious racists who attacked them and their children physically and assassinated their leaders. They also organized, which was one of the messages from Rev. Black’s testimony she said resonated with her.
As an organizer, Mejía said she heard a call for community-building, connecting with neighbors, and getting more people to take an active role in participating in governance. She cited research by Erica Chenoweth, dean and Frank Stanton Professor of the First Amendment at Harvard Kennedy School, who theorizes that governments typically fail to withstand challenges from 3.5 percent of the population. To her, that means doing exactly what she did to get elected: meeting with constituents, offering training and education sessions, and listening to their needs, fears, and hopes, and encouraging them to do the same.
“In many ways we’re going to have to return to old-school organizing,” she said. “3.5 percent deeply engaged doesn’t just mean people reading the news but rather … 3.5 percent of the population has to be actively engaging with their neighbors, activating them.”
That is what will roll back ICE and the rising fascism it embodies. After all, she said, the United States has already endured a fascist regime. “We’ve experienced that in the U.S,” she said. “It just wasn’t evenly distributed.”
For Toscano, it also requires imagining a new future, as Du Bois wrote about in the 1930s. Toscano says it is striking that the best that many Democratic leaders can do is think about removing recent institutions, not radically overhauling any of the American systems that have made ICE and the Trump/Miller immigration terror campaign possible. It’s not as if the South just gave Black people better representation out of kindness, he said. The Union Army occupied Southern states and forced them to.
“There’s almost no willingness to recognize that the reason things have come to this really grim point is because the U.S. laws and the U.S. state make all of this possible,” Toscano said. “What I don’t see happening, even among the further left edges of the Democratic Party, is a political analysis that would really say that a very drastic reform of the U.S. constitutional order would be necessary for this not to happen again.”
Without that, he said, rhetoric about the rule of law, the Constitution, the checks and balances is completely hollow. That unwillingness, the inability to really question the institutional and legal order of the United States, is what has made ICE possible.
“So, what would a reform or transformation or abolition of this kind of precedent look like?” he asked. “And who’s willing to take it on?”
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Whitney Curry Wimbish is a staff writer at The American Prospect. She previously worked in the Financial Times newsletters division, The Cambodia Daily in Phnom Penh, and the Herald News in New Jersey. Her work has been published in multiple outlets, including The New York Times, The Baffler, Los Angeles Review of Books, Music & Literature, North American Review, Sentient, Semafor, and elsewhere. She is a coauthor of The Majority Report’s daily newsletter and publishes short fiction in a range of literary magazines. She can be reached on Signal at wwimbish.07. More by Whitney Curry Wimbish
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