Kamala Harris Cheers On Violent Anti-ICE Mob

There’s a difference between criticizing a policy and celebrating the obstruction of law enforcement officers doing their jobs. It’s the difference between being a political opponent and being a threat to the rule of law.

Kamala Harris just erased that difference on camera.

The Quote

During a conversation with American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten, Harris was asked about the anti-ICE activity in Minneapolis. Her response wasn’t measured. It wasn’t diplomatic. It wasn’t the careful hedge of a former vice president protecting future political options.

It was cheerleading.

“In Minneapolis, just look at what we’ve been seeing. It’s so fantastic. People coming out with their whistles, they’re videotaping. And, you know, with perfect strangers and aiding perfect strangers, it’s been so beautiful to see.”

Fantastic. Beautiful. Those are the words a former vice president of the United States used to describe organized interference with federal law enforcement operations.

Not “concerning.” Not “understandable but complicated.” Fantastic. Beautiful.

She then doubled down, framing the mob activity as a civics lesson: “The power of numbers… we teach that to kids, right?”

Yes, Kamala. You’re teaching kids that surrounding federal agents and disrupting lawful operations is a beautiful expression of community. That’s exactly the lesson America needs right now.

What Those Whistles Actually Do

Harris described people “coming out with their whistles” like it was a neighborhood block party. Let’s talk about what those whistles actually are.

They’re alert systems. When ICE agents are spotted in a neighborhood, activists blow whistles to mobilize crowds. The crowds don’t show up to observe. They show up to interfere — surrounding agents, blocking vehicles, filming officers’ faces for doxxing, and creating chaotic scenes designed to prevent the execution of lawful removal orders.

Those orders come from Congress. They’re authorized by federal courts. They’re carried out by agents who swore an oath and strap on a badge every morning knowing that someone in a crowd might decide today is the day it turns violent.

Minneapolis isn’t hypothetical. The city has already seen deadly encounters during immigration enforcement. Renee Good and Alex Pretti were fatally shot during ICE and Border Patrol activity in operations that were ultimately shut down. Real people died in real confrontations in the exact city Harris is praising as a model.

And she called the mob activity that makes those confrontations more likely “so beautiful.”

The Pattern

This isn’t a one-off moment of poor phrasing. Harris has been building toward this position for years with the consistency of someone who means it.

She previously chanted “Up, up with education. Down, down with deportation” at a public event. Not at a private fundraiser where the cameras weren’t supposed to be rolling. At a public event. On purpose. As a slogan.

She’s positioned herself against deportation policy as a principle. Not against specific cases of overreach. Not against particular enforcement tactics. Against the concept of removing people who are in the country illegally — the same concept that a 9-0 Supreme Court just reinforced, the same concept that every poll shows a majority of Americans support.

Harris isn’t reading the room. She’s auditioning for a room that doesn’t represent the country.

The Agent on the Ground

Put yourself in the boots of an ICE agent in Minneapolis for thirty seconds. You’ve got a warrant. You’ve got a lawful order. You’ve got a target who’s been through the immigration court system and lost. Your job is to execute the removal.

You pull up to a neighborhood and within minutes, whistles are blowing. Crowds are forming. Phones are in your face. People are screaming. Some are blocking your vehicle. Some are standing between you and the person you’re legally authorized to detain.

Your training says de-escalate. Your instinct says survive. Your radio is full of chatter from other agents in similar situations across the city. And somewhere in the back of your mind, you know that the former Vice President of the United States just went on a podcast and called this “fantastic.”

She didn’t just fail to support you. She endorsed the mob that’s making your job more dangerous. She praised the interference that could get you killed. And she did it with a smile while talking about teaching kids the “power of numbers.”

That’s not leadership. That’s incitement with plausible deniability.

The 2028 Calculation

Harris is positioning for another presidential run. Everyone knows it. The Iran critique, the anti-ICE cheerleading, the progressive base work with union leaders — it’s all calibration for a primary where the loudest voice wins.

But there’s a problem with this particular calibration. Americans overwhelmingly support immigration enforcement. They support ICE. They support deportations of people here illegally, especially those with criminal records. Every poll confirms this. The 2024 election confirmed this. The 9-0 Supreme Court ruling confirmed this.

Harris is building her 2028 campaign on the opposite side of where the country stands. She’s betting that the Democratic primary electorate is so far left that celebrating mob interference with federal agents is a winning message.

She might be right about the primary. She’s catastrophically wrong about the general. Voters already rejected her once. They did it in part because she couldn’t articulate a coherent position on anything. Now she’s articulating one — and it’s that federal law enforcement is the enemy and the mobs are the heroes.

The Line She Crossed

There is a clear, bright line between criticizing immigration policy and endorsing interference with law enforcement. Every American has the right to protest. Every American has the right to film police. Every American has the right to advocate for policy changes through legal channels.

Nobody has the right to organize crowds to physically obstruct federal agents executing court-ordered operations. That’s not protest. That’s obstruction. And when a former vice president calls it “fantastic” and “beautiful,” she’s not just crossing the line — she’s telling millions of supporters that the line doesn’t exist.

The next time a crowd in Minneapolis swells around an ICE operation. The next time an agent gets surrounded. The next time a confrontation turns violent and someone doesn’t go home — Harris’s words will be part of the chain of events that led there.

She knows it. She said it anyway. And she’ll say it again, because the applause from the base is louder than the conscience she’s choosing to ignore.


Most Popular

Most Popular