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Feb 8, 2026

South Texas Protest Highlights Growing Backlash Against ICE Funding in 2026 DHS Budget

South Texas Protest Highlights Growing Backlash Against ICE Funding in 2026 DHS Budget
Roughly four dozen residents gathered outside Representative Henry Cuellar’s Laredo district office on February 7 to condemn his vote in favor of a US$64 billion Department of Homeland Security appropriations bill that allocates about US$10 billion to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). The demonstration—organized by the Laredo chapter of Democratic Socialists of America with support from local immigrant-rights groups—comes amid national scrutiny of ICE after two high-profile fatal shootings by federal agents in Minneapolis last month. (lmtonline.com)

Protesters argued that the bill perpetuates what they call a “violent and unaccountable” immigration system. Speakers criticized Cuellar, a Democrat who serves as ranking member of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Homeland Security, for voting with Republicans to advance the measure despite progressive demands to curtail ICE enforcement funds. They also blasted Cuellar’s public support for expanding temporary-worker visa programs that provide no path to citizenship, saying the programs “exploit labor while denying long-term status.”

Cuellar has defended his vote as a compromise needed to avert a government shutdown, noting that the bill trims certain ICE enforcement lines while boosting oversight, disaster-response grants, and Border Patrol staffing in South Texas. His office has not commented on the protest. The bill funds DHS only through February 13, leaving additional negotiations—and potential policy riders on body-camera mandates, arrest-warrant requirements, and face-covering bans—for the weeks ahead.

South Texas Protest Highlights Growing Backlash Against ICE Funding in 2026 DHS Budget


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For employers that depend on seasonal or cross-border labor in the Rio Grande Valley, the drama underscores continued uncertainty over funding for critical adjudication and inspection functions. If Congress fails to reach agreement before the mid-February deadline, another short-term continuing resolution could delay USCIS fee hikes and slow hiring timelines. Conversely, hard-line amendments could restrict parole or humanitarian entry programs that many local companies use to recruit talent.

In the meantime, immigrant-advocacy groups say they will escalate pressure on border-district legislators. “We intend to remind Congress that immigration funding is not just a budget line,” said organizer Maxine Rebeles. “It determines whether our communities are raided or our workers feel safe showing up on the job.”
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