Toronto Star

‘Abolish ICE’ is a double-edged slogan

As midterm elections near, Democrats split over how to approach immigratio­n and agency’s tactics

- DANIEL DALE Twitter: @ddale8

WASHINGTON— Hundreds of liberals gathered in Louisville, Ky., to rally against U.S. President Donald Trump’s policy of separating children from their parents at the border.

Then a rally speaker asked them all to leave.

Instead of standing at Metro Hall, activist Izzy Sanchez said, protesters should march to the office of U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE), the agency responsibl­e for arresting people for deportatio­n. Hundreds went with him, chanting “shut down ICE.” But hundreds stayed put, including the Democratic mayor. Many of the latter group, according to the Louisville Courier-Journal, “appeared confused by the sudden division.”

The literal split was representa­tive of a broader split among Democrats over how to approach immigratio­n in general and ICE in particular.

Party moderates, and many progressiv­es, want to focus on Trump’s controvers­ial policies. They are being tested by a growing party faction, led by left-wingers, that is pushing its own controvers­ial proposal to dissolve ICE entirely.

“We don’t want reformatio­n. We want the full abolition of ICE,” said Jesus Ibanez, one of the organizers of the Louisville march and now the ongoing “Occupy ICE” encampment. “What we must do is dismantle the deportatio­n machine.”

Democrats are moving leftward on a host of issues under Trump, moving away from trying to court moderates and toward positions that excite their base. The immigratio­n shift has been driven not only by anger at Trump but frustratio­n with Democratic leaders whose pleas for moderation have neither produced successful legislatio­n nor stopped Republican­s from wrongly claiming they support “open borders.” “We in the community of Democrats have been yelling for about 20 years for immigratio­n reform, immigratio­n reform. And what has that got us? Nowhere. We have crumbs,” said Ibanez, 33, a recent law school graduate. “The same people who are against abolition of ICE, what have they done? Absolutely nothing. It’s now time for new tactics.”

The calls for ICE abolition are still confined to a minority of party voters and an even smaller minority of elected officials. But they have suddenly grown big enough to alarm senior Democratic figures who worry they will alienate white moderates in the midterm elections.

Jeh Johnson, Homeland Security secretary under Barack Obama, has decried the proposal as unrealisti­c and a threat to national unity. Democratic Senate Leader Chuck Schumer told reporters: “Look, ICE does some functions that are very much needed.

“Reform ICE? Yes. That’s what I think we should do,” he said.

ICE was created in 2003 out of the dissolutio­n of another government body. (The Border Patrol, not ICE, guards the border and apprehends people who have just entered the country illegally; ICE arrests people around the country.) Sean McElwee, an activist behind the abolition push, said abolishing ICE is “100 per cent doable,” even “trivial,” given how often the government reorganize­s its bureaucrac­ies.

ICE received frequent criti- cism from immigrants and activists under Obama. Under Trump, a bigger group of progressiv­es has come to see it as an instrument of cruelty. As Trump has encouraged officers to be aggressive and “mean,” reports have mounted of ICE arresting unauthoriz­ed immigrants beloved by their communitie­s, caring f or children and dealing with disabiliti­es.

Until the last two months, though, the refrain “Abolish ICE” was still obscure. To the extent it was known to the media, it was largely as a quixotic Twitter refrain from McElwee, 25, who argues the agency’s work “can only be described as ethnic cleansing.”

Then, fuelled by the fury over Trump’s family separation, it went national.

One day in late June, McElwee looked at his phone at a Starbucks and began laughing with such glee other patrons looked at him funny. He had just seen New York governor candidate Cynthia Nixon say she wanted to abolish ICE, which she called a “terrorist organizati­on.”

That same week, Wisconsin Rep. Mark Pocan said he would introduce abolition legislatio­n. Then left-wing Queens, N.Y., congressio­nal candidate Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who campaigned on abolition, won a primary upset over a top party incumbent. Then a potential presidenti­al candidate, New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, became the first senator to endorse abolition.

“I think it’s just shown the power of a really clear, concrete demand and something people can really grasp,” McElwee said.

As McElwee has watched with delight, so have Republican­s. Trump and others have attempted to draw attention to the abolition movement, using it as evidence for their claims about Democratic extremism and ammunition for their claims about the supposed threat of immigrant criminals.

Republican strategist Rick Tyler, a frequent Trump critic, said abolition is “ludicrous” as a practical matter and unwise as a political refrain.

“I think the Democrats have been dealt, on many issues, a winning hand. But if they’re going to squander that winning hand into overreachi­ng and driving the issue back the other way, that’s just not politicall­y smart,” he said.

There is no consensus on what exactly “Abolish ICE” means. McElwee is clearer: he wants to end mass deportatio­n.

“I think the number of people who should be deported in a sane, functionin­g United States would be roughly one one-hundredth of what you have now,” he said.

“We want the full abolition of ICE. What we must do is dismantle the deportatio­n machine.” JESUS IBANEZ OCCUPY ICE ORGANIZER

 ?? JESUS IBANEZ ?? Jesus Ibanez, 33, speaks at the Occupy ICE encampment protest in Louisville, Ky. Democrats seem divided over whether the federal agency should be reformed or abolished.
JESUS IBANEZ Jesus Ibanez, 33, speaks at the Occupy ICE encampment protest in Louisville, Ky. Democrats seem divided over whether the federal agency should be reformed or abolished.

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