Feb. 13, 2026

“Before I say thanks to God, I’m gonna say: ICE out!” proclaimed trap and reggaeton artist Bad Bunny on February 1, while accepting the Grammy award for best urban music album.

The crowd inside the show, which took place in Los Angeles, overwhelmingly responded with cheers.

“We’re not savage, we’re not animals, we’re not aliens,” Bad Bunny added. “We are humans and we are Americans.”

The Grammy ceremony and Bad Bunny’s anti-ICE statement came in the context of the Trump administration’s brutal crackdown against immigrant workers, with hundreds of thousands of people arrested and deported in the last year, often violently. This anti-working-class assault has generated mass protests — particularly in Minnesota, which has become ground zero for the ICE dragnet. That’s where last month federal agents murdered volunteer observers Renee Good and Alex Pretti, both U.S. citizens, in cold blood.

Bad Bunny, one of the most well-known and awarded U.S. musicians today, repeated his pro-immigrant message a week later at the Super Bowl halftime show, without making an explicit political statement as he did in the Grammys.