By Armando Hernandez
Secretary of Homeland Security Markwayne Mullin starred in a new political confrontation during his appearance before the Senate by defending the immigration policies of Donald Trump’s administration and attacking Democratic legislators who have denounced abuses committed by immigration agents.
The controversy arose after the leader of the Democratic minority in the Senate, Chuck Schumer, published on the social network X images of two recent incidents involving Democratic senators and federal agents. Schumer stated that, if even members of the Senate can be subject to aggressive actions by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), “no American is safe from the abuses” of the agency.
The cruelty is the level.
The Trump-Mullin ICE is wrongly detaining folks? and in detention, they’re being treated in a non-human model also can soundless.
Worms in meals. Not health center therapy. Unhappy infrastructure. Rampant flu and viruses.
Now, detainees are being overwhelmed by agents. pic.twitter.com/Rnv0YnHKL3
—Senate Judiciary Democrats?? (@JudiciaryDems) June 1, 2026
Mullin responded by calling Schumer a “liberal career politician” and accused Democrats of demonizing law enforcement. In addition, he assured that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is focused on “enforcing the law, securing the border and deporting violent undocumented aliens.”
Mullin’s appearance reflects an increasingly polarized political strategy within the US immigration debate. Although during his confirmation hearing he promised to respect constitutional guarantees and stated that federal agents should have warrants to enter homes, his closed defense of immigration operations and his attacks on critics have fueled doubts about his ability to reduce political tension around DHS.
Various analysts and Democratic legislators maintain that the problem does not lie solely in the application of immigration laws, but in the lack of supervision and accountability of agencies such as ICE and the Border Patrol. In fact, Disagreements over controls and reforms to these agencies have led to budget clashes in Congress and tense negotiations over DHS funding.
The appearance also confirms that immigration will continue to be one of the main political battlegrounds in Washington ahead of the midterm elections.
Keep reading:
- HRW warns that migrants deported to Mexico are at risk from cartels
- “Latinos are not a threat to the United States. We are from the United States”
- Citizens arrested, beaten and detained by ICE seek justice






