The Daily - ‘Thugs’: The Moderate Democrat Railing Against ICE
Episode Date: February 19, 2026Senator Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada is nobody’s idea of a partisan firebrand. She’s a moderate, swing-state Democrat with a résumé steeped in law enforcement — all of which makes her an u...nlikely leader of the Democratic-led shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security, which has now entered its sixth day.But over the past few months, Senator Cortez Masto said she was horrified by the conduct of federal immigration enforcement agents in her own state and across the country. By last week, she and many of her Democratic colleagues in the Senate decided to act on their outrage.In an interview with her on “The Daily,” Senator Cortez Masto talks about why she decided to support withholding homeland security funding, the political perils for her party in blocking that funding and why she believes most Americans support the strategy.Guest: Catherine Cortez Masto of NevadaBackground reading: Democrats and the White House traded offers, but a deal to reopen the Department of Homeland Security remained elusive.A polling memo circulated among centrist senators urged Democrats to talk tougher on crime, while noting an opportunity for the party to appeal to voters with criticism of ICE.Photo: Eric Lee for The New York TimesFor more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From New York Times, I'm Michael Bobarro. This is the Daily.
Today marks the sixth day of an unusual government shutdown
in which Democrats have withheld funding to a single federal agency,
the Department of Homeland Security,
in order to force President Trump to change how thousands of its agents enforce immigration laws.
Today, my conversation with an unlikely leader of the Democratic,
Democratic Strategy, Senator Catherine Cortez Mastow of Nevada. It's Thursday, February 19th.
Senator. Hello, how are you? Good morning.
This is Michael Barbaro.
Michael, how I recognize the voice. How are you? Oh, that's flattering. Thank you for making
time for us. Well, thank you. I appreciate the opportunity to talk with you. And by the way,
thank you for the great reporting you do. Seriously, it's important. Yeah.
You are, as we speak, in Nevada.
Correct.
Not in Washington, D.C., because Congress is on a somewhat ill-timed recess.
That's right.
And I said ill-timed because we're in the middle of a partial government shutdown.
And I want to talk about your role in that.
We tend, Senator, to think of the lawmakers who become the face of a government shutdown
or one of the faces of it as a particular kind of lawmaker, a firebrand.
and a rabble-rouser, pick your adjective.
You were pretty distinctly not that.
Does that seem fair?
I would agree that I'm a moderate.
To me, those are, the moderates are people who are working to get things done, right?
Who work in a bipartisan way, who think that good government is important,
that we still have to work together to do our jobs,
we still have to deliver for the American public,
whether it's in our state where we live or across the country. And I think most people, at least when I'm in my state, they expect that. They expect you to not only work on behalf, but work in a bipartisan way. But they also know that there are times, and I think it's okay to be out there and pick that fight and say, no, this is a battle I'm going to be very vocal about. This is one I'm going to stand up and say, this can't occur. And you see that. I've done that, and you will see that for me.
many moderates across the country doing the same thing.
Well, the last time there was a government shutdown, you opposed it.
I think you voted against it something like 15 times.
And so I don't tend to think of you as a shutdown person.
I see what you're saying.
Yeah.
So let me just say this.
For me, there's nothing wrong with calling out an administration.
I don't care what party you are.
That's hurting our community.
That is challenging our very norms, particularly around.
In this case, law and order.
They need to be challenged and they need to be called out.
Well, that's what we want to talk about, how you got to this point where you decided to support withholding funding from the Department of Homeland Security.
And I think it stands out that you have joined this effort because of your background in law enforcement.
You're a former attorney general in the state.
You have a very strong set of relationships with law enforcement, which I'm sure we're going to be talking about in this conversation.
DHS, the Department of Homeland Security, is a major law enforcement agency, and you have decided that funding should be withheld from it over the way it has approached immigration enforcement.
And I want to talk about how, given your background, you got to that point. So tell us that story. Where does it begin over the past year or so?
So let me just say back in September when we were talking about the first shutdown.
Over health care.
Over health care. That's right.
I knew going into that argument, we weren't going to win it.
You knew that you were not going to win it.
You could play it out.
You could see that the Republicans were not going to support an extension of the ACA tax credits because here's why.
Most Republicans never even voted for the ACA.
So they weren't going to go out there and vote for an ACA tax credit.
So I knew it wasn't going to happen.
Right.
You didn't see an outcome where the core issue of health care costs was going to be addressed.
But here's the thing, Michael, here's the thing I do know, that.
that because this fight was taken on, many people across the country understood that we need to do a better job of health care.
So to me, this is a perfect example of where Democrats come in.
We are fighting for health care.
We're fighting for affordability and access.
Republicans don't care.
Republicans do not care about that.
You're saying that even though you didn't support that last shutdown, you ended up seeing the value of it in sending a message.
So let me get to this next shutdown, which you all.
are supporting. Tell me how you decided, and kind of when you decided that there was a problem
with immigration enforcement as it was being practiced by the Department of Homeland Security,
because this all started, of course, with President Trump's second term a little over a year ago.
And I wonder if you could just take me on the journey you went through.
So let me give you some background. Most people don't know. Most of my career has been in law enforcement.
quite honestly, when Homeland Security was created, I was working in the U.S. Attorney's Office in Washington, D.C.
It's a federal prosecutor.
And my husband was a Secret Service agent.
Wow.
So you're both in law enforcement.
That's right.
And I continued that work, became Attorney General here in the state of Nevada, did that for eight years, worked with law enforcement, with prosecutors, my entire career, and understand the benefits and what we are trying to achieve when we're
keep our community safe around community policing. If you're effective law enforcement agency,
you're going to get in the community and build that public trust. That's what it's about.
You want to go after the violent criminals. You want to hold them accountable. But you also want
to protect individuals constitutional rights because it's about keeping your community safe.
Now comes along this administration. And they have all of this money the Republicans have given them
in their tax bill. Right. The one big beautiful bill is he calls it. Yep.
The one big beautiful bill, Republicans give them about $170 billion altogether, and that's $75 billion going to ICE, which the normal annual budget for ICE is anywhere about $8 to $10 billion.
Right.
There's no strings attached, no strings attached.
And what we are seeing now is because they have all this money and because they had this quota from Stephen Miller to do 3,000 immigration deportations and detainments a day, they started onboarding whoever they could to work at ICE.
Right.
And not only were they onboarding them very quickly, they lowered their standards for hiring them.
And they decreased the training that most law enforcement go through as they're looking to do community policing, right?
De-escalation standards, use of force standards, none of that.
So you become unsettled just from recognizing that there's a sudden hiring binge and that the standards are changing and that the training in your mind is insufficient.
This is back many months ago.
So that's your first set of concerns.
How do those evolve over time?
So then, as we are seeing in communities, this administration, unfortunately, wasn't about public safety.
Even though Donald Trump was talking about going after violent criminals, which, listen, I think we all, everybody in the community, I don't care where you live, you want violent criminals out of your communities, you want your community safe.
You want to know that when you call 911 and you have concerns,
police officer are going to respond.
They're going to keep you safe, respect your rights,
but go after those violent criminals.
What we were seeing, however, is just the opposite.
Now they're sending in to our communities
numbers of agents that normally were not assigned in those communities,
this deportation force of excessive force,
and they are coming into communities,
and they are just roving patrols,
which we've never seen before.
Roving patrols, they are knocking on doing,
They are not even knocking half the time.
They're going in and without a judicial warrant.
They're pulling people out of their cars.
They are following people, I know this because this happened in Las Vegas,
following people with masks home from church.
Following people home from church in your state.
Home from church in my state.
And I talk to law enforcement all the time.
I also know that during this period of time,
they actually went after some of my local law enforcement,
police officers went after their families.
And threatened those officers.
I just want to start out and understand this.
You found evidence that immigration enforcement agents were pursuing the families of local law enforcement?
Correct.
Correct.
Was it because of their immigration status?
It was because of their immigration status that they had been in Nevada for a long period of time.
They were not violent criminals.
But they had been working, paying taxes, raising their family.
and they were going after these individuals.
And they were threatening the careers
of these law enforcement officers.
What did that tell you?
That tells me they're out of control.
That tells me there is another reason
why they're coming into our communities.
It wasn't about going after the most,
the violent criminals.
It was much more heinous.
And it was not at the level
that we saw in Chicago or Minneapolis,
but it is happening.
And what you're describing,
this is all happening
before Minneapolis.
That's correct.
And then we see what plays out in Minneapolis
when they send that police force in.
A national police force
that this administration wants to create
to just come in and brutalize communities
and scare people under the guise of some sort of immigration enforcement.
A national police force that's brutalizing.
I mean, those are some very loaded phrases.
I just want to make sure I'm understanding them.
Yeah, no, please, because I think it is absolutely correct.
they are going after peaceful protesters.
They're killing peaceful protesters who are outraged that they're coming into their communities
and actually not even going after violent criminals.
And they're violating individuals' rights.
They are detaining and deporting U.S. citizens.
They are using their administrative warrants to go into people's private properties.
They have violated the First Amendment, the Second Amendment, the Fourth Amendment, the Fifth Amendment,
the Tenth Amendment of our Constitution.
That's what this administration is doing.
So yes, it demands action.
And so in your mind, given your background in law enforcement, this is not how law enforcement is supposed to be operating.
And in mid-January, you do something about it, and you introduce a piece of legislation about ICE that would divert much of this money that we're talking about that came from the one big, beautiful bill that was designated for things like ICE and divert it to local law.
enforcement. They have too much money. That's $75 billion in ice. Too much. So let's take it away. Let's,
let's divert it to local law enforcement and state law enforcement who are trained to work in our
communities, who know how to manage a protest or even pull somebody over in the car without
violating their constitutional rights. It's the same, I hear it and see it in my community, same
conversation that you saw from the police chief of Minneapolis saying the same thing. Right.
It's just common sense. We had them on the show. Because
I also know working and talking to my local police chiefs and sheriffs that not only are they
understaffed, but when when this deportation force comes into the communities, they are then
overwhelmed.
And part of this is if we are really working to keep our communities safe, let's trust those
agencies that are trained to do it.
Right.
And take the money away from these ICE agents who clearly not only are not trained, they
don't care to be trained, and they don't care that they're violating and harming individuals
and or killing them.
And Republicans don't embrace this proposal you have,
and you and your colleagues decide that something else has to be done,
given that.
And what you all come up with is to use your power of the purse,
your role as the minority in the Senate,
to hold up funding for DHS in a spending bill
unless you get a series of reforms
within DHS.
And I want to quickly summarize
those reforms that you all ask for.
You ask for
there to be warrants
when these agents come
to make arrests
or to go to a house
or a business.
You ask that agents' IDs be visible.
You ask that they no longer wear masks.
And I wonder why you all decide
that those are the reforms
that if you don't get,
you will hold
hold up DHS funding.
How you arrive at that negotiation tactic, essentially.
Yeah, I can tell you very clearly.
For my background in working with law enforcement,
those are common sense practices that are local law enforcement
engage in every day to keep our community safe.
That's why.
And so a lot of the policies and protocols that we had developed
in the Democratic ask were just common sense policies
that are local law enforcement and state officers were already doing.
That you now want federal immigration
agents to use as well.
That's correct. Why shouldn't they?
So late last week, having not gotten any of these requests granted to you by the administration, by DHS,
you and your Democratic colleagues in the Senate, you cast a vote to block funding to the agency.
And you know this well because you talked about the previous shutdown over health care.
Shutdowns involve a lot of pain, a lot of unintended pain. Workers don't get paid,
but a lot of them have to work anyway.
So services become strained.
In the case of DHS, that means services like airport security, TSA,
cybersecurity, FEMA, Coast Guard.
And you all have made a decision that you know
will probably cause some of that unintended pain.
And I want to know why you think it's worth it to do this.
If we do not stand up against this lawlessness that we see,
this administration engaging in in our communities, then what is left for us?
If you carry out to the logical conclusion that this administration has created their own police force,
that they're made up of individuals who don't follow normal protocols that police follow to keep our communities safe,
and they're doing just the opposite, and they're sending them out under the guise of immigration enforcement,
what's next for them?
And the concern is the next is they're going to bring them out around our election process.
They're going to try to claim the election is...
That's what you fear is next.
Absolutely. It's the logical conclusion that you see happening.
This administration is using this police force to do its bidding.
Listen, I never thought that I would see the day where immigration agents that I worked with in the past at a federal level would be engaging in the brutality that they're doing now.
Well, Senator, we're going to take a break.
And when we come back, I want to engage with the challenges that Democrats, including you, may face in explaining what this shutdown is and what it isn't to the public.
We'll be right back.
Senator, I want to turn now to a fundamental challenge for you and your party when it comes to this shutdown of DHS.
You've made clear that you see this as a question of what good law enforcement.
enforcement is and what it isn't, and that right now, immigration enforcement operations represent
bad law enforcement to you. But to some meaningful percentage of voters, this could end up looking
like something else, which is potentially Democrats being weak on immigration. How do you respond to that?
Well, I think traditionally, I have seen that. Democrats are weak on immigration. Under the last
administration under we have seen that.
Full stop. I mean, you're conceding that.
Yeah. Well, absolutely, because this has been my challenge. I know as somebody who has worked in
this space, we can do both. We can secure our borders. We can address the human trafficking,
the drug trafficking, weapons trafficking that's happening at the border. I know because as
Attorney General, I worked on it. I'm not a border state, but I'm close enough that I worked with
the Mexican AGs on these very issues. We can work to work.
to secure it, fund it, and at the same time, have an immigration process that is, treats people
with respect who want to come to this country, who have been playing by the rules, who have
actually contributed to our communities and paying taxes and raising their families.
We can do both.
But I have seen Democrats shy away from that.
They don't talk about the balance between the two.
And I watch as the last administration under Biden was too afraid to talk about securing
the border. So it's just, to me, this is common sense. This is where most of the, at least in
Nevada, and I see most of the country, this is how they think Americans aren't stupid. They can see
both sides of it and want both sides of it. But by defunding the agency that oversees immigration
enforcement, including at the border, how do you avoid the perception that you are making
that work, which, as you just acknowledge, Democrats are not.
known for being effective enough at, how do you avoid making that work harder or and less effective?
So what my ask is and what I've been talking about with my colleagues, and this is where Democrats
need to be aligned, is that we are not saying completely defund ICE. What we are saying is
fund them to the level they traditionally were so that we are securing our borders. And we are
also working in our communities with local law enforcement to go after the violent criminals
under the immigration jurisdiction that they have that they've traditionally done.
So this isn't a defunding ICE or CBP. It's just let's give them the funding they need to actually
operate under the traditional jurisdiction to help keep our community safe and work with local
law enforcement. Right. In a sense you're saying don't overfund them. But in making the argument
you're making, you're drawing an interesting distinction. You're suggesting that many
voters want and expect a certain conduct from immigration enforcement agents and that they want
enforcement to be focused on criminals. We've talked to plenty of people on this show, and from
what you said, you're a listener, voters who want interior enforcement based on the fact that they
believe illegally crossing the border into the U.S. itself is a crime. And so in making the
distinctions that you are, are you in a certain sense potentially creating an incentive,
the incentive that Democrats have been criticized for creating, which is you can come to the United
States, you can come illegally, and you can stay? And isn't that what President Trump won his
election in part based on? No, here, let me just put a finer point on this. I do think there
is a role for Congress when it comes to our immigration laws.
right? Yes, we have to have a process for people to come here. Yes, we want to make sure they move
through that process. Congress has failed to do its job and update the laws, and that's what we
should be doing. But let me just say, Michael, people play politics with this all the time. And it is
an issue to me that is so frustrating. People, Republicans, Democrats, it's all politics to them.
It is not about how we move our country forward with individuals who want to work hard.
be a part of our community and have shown that and raise their families. I am a U.S.
senator because my grandfather came from Chihuahua, Mexico. And then he served in the U.S. Army and
became a U.S. citizen. Now, why should my story be any different than any other person who
comes to this country and wants the same opportunities for their kids and their grandchildren?
That's what this is about. But when the Trump administration and Stephen Miller decide that all
immigrants are horrific and they're rapists and they're killers and we don't want any immigrant
here, that is wrong. And it goes against our laws in this country and who we are. And to me,
this is a failing on Congress. This is a failing on my Republican colleagues who refuse to come to
the table and work with us on to address this and instead would rather play politics with this to win
elections. How confident are you that the position you're articulating here is where most
Americans are. And I asked that because I have some inside information from my colleagues in the
newsroom in the Washington Bureau who saw a memo that you circulated to some of your colleagues
in the Democratic Caucus of the Senate, making the case that there is a right way to talk about
this that involves both criticizing immigration enforcement as it currently exists, while also
establishing some firm understandings about what is wrong with illegal immigration and where
enforcement needs to be very tough. Yeah, you're right. I have been working as part of the,
what we call the mod squad, moderate senators, to ensure that the states that we come from,
which are swing states like Nevada, where there is a diverse group of people living there,
including in terms of party affiliation, Democrats, Republicans, nonpartisans, and equal numbers,
these are the individuals that are going to make the difference in whether or not Democrats are going to be in control of the Senate.
That's how we win the Senate back.
And if we are going to appeal to them and talk to them and listen to them, we have to understand what they care about.
And the polling that you're referring to is a polling of just those swing states and who those voters are.
And you're absolutely right.
They want to save communities.
But they also are demanding what they are seeing with ICE.
They don't like the over excessive abuse of ICE.
They want ICE to focus on the violent criminals.
And they want to know that people are working to help keep their communities safe from those violent criminals, the worst of the worst.
Okay.
So they want an effective – this polling shows that voters want an effective ICE that follows the rules,
but that does its job particularly when it comes to detaining, deporting, criminal immigrant.
who are here illegally. That's right. And that's what I say is our conversation with them is,
yes, we've got to get them back to the time where we do this, where we allow the system to work,
to go after and find individuals that are the worst or the worst, the most violent. We also
hold people accountable to following our immigration laws. That is the traditional role of ICE and CBP,
and that's what many people want and understand. They do not want what they are seeing playing out
in front of their very eyes on TV or even in their communities.
And quite honestly, that's why they're coming out and protesting.
That's why they're using their voices.
That's why you see them out there.
And they shouldn't be killed for it.
I want to go back to the last shutdown as a point of reference.
Leaders of your party, like Senator Tuck Schumer,
they believe that ultimately that shutdown,
which you didn't support, but it sounds like you gained some valuable lessons from,
that that was a political victory in the way that it,
elevated the issue of rising health care costs and put it on Republicans. But even as a victory,
politically, it did not result in policy changes. If this shutdown of DHS becomes something like that,
a messaging win without policy changes that you're asking for, would you be satisfied with that?
Yes, because here's why.
You would be.
Because here's why.
At the end of the day, this is about an administration who is out of control.
And if they are not willing to even compromise or work with us on addressing what the American
public sees with this ICE agency, they're not willing to come to work with us to rein them in.
There's a problem with that administration.
And the only way at the end of the day for us to get more accountability over this administration
is to take control of Congress, is to win in these elections, whether it is in the House or the Senate.
We have more oversight role. We have more accountability. We can call them in. We can demand change.
We have more control over the appropriations. Right now, what we are seeing in this country is the Republicans in control have abdicated their role in Congress to this administration and doing whatever the bidding of this administration, whatever it wants to.
do. So even if you don't win these reforms, you may win the argument. And winning the argument
might then mean winning the election. And then you can, in your mind, change the way this
administration operates when it comes to immigration enforcement. And that's how the process works.
That's who we are as Americans. That's what this is about. That's what this country is. And that's
worth fighting for. Whether we win the policy debate or we win the messaging war, the end of the day,
it's do we win as a country? Do we win when we stand? When we
say no more to this administration sending these thugs into our communities. And we can do that as a
country when we elect and make change. Let's say for a moment that you do end up getting what you
want at some point from the administration. You do end up with some understanding that the masks
might come off these agents, that they're going to be using warrants and they're going to be
identifying themselves with badges as they go about their work. Even if you get all that with
agencies like ICE and with Border Patrol, given the way they have operated and given the rhetoric
from the president, given the conduct that you have described as heinous, you've called some of these
folks thugs, even if you get these reforms, will these be agencies and agents that you can have
faith in? Or is the problem here a lot bigger than tactics and conduct? That's a fair question,
and I think the problem here is a lot bigger, right? Of course, not only do we want these reforms,
but we want to be able to ensure we can enforce the administration to follow these reforms.
And we have seen in the past a lack of trust from this administration. They say one thing and do another.
So it is a valid point, and it is something that not just,
members of Congress, but I think the American public are grappling with, and why they are demanding
change in the elected leaders, and they're demanding and calling out what they are seeing.
I think this administration thrives on chaos and uncertainty and constantly moving the goalposts.
That's how this president has succeeded in the past. That's how he will continue to operate,
but is not how you govern and is not what the American people want.
Senator, how does this shutdown come to an end?
Or does it not come to an end until after the midterms if the administration isn't really going to negotiate?
Yeah, I don't know the pathway.
I can't.
I don't know, Michael, I can only say at this moment and this time, the changes that we are demanding, it has to occur.
We cannot see another community being brutalized by these lawless ICE agents and CBP under this administration.
We just cannot.
Well, Senator, thank you very much for your time.
We really appreciate it.
Thank you, Michael.
On Wednesday afternoon, Democratic leaders in Congress chastised both President Trump and congressional Republicans
for failing to act with urgency to end the shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security.
Donald Trump spent the weekend on the golf course with Ron DeSantis.
And so we've not seen any high-level effort.
coming from the president or from the House or Senate Republican leaders,
we have no idea where they're at in the midst of a crisis, of their own making.
During a news conference, House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries
said that his party's proposal for ending the shutdown was in the hands of the White House,
but that he was still waiting for their response.
ICE needs to be reformed in a dramatic, bold, meaningful,
full and transformational manner.
And if that doesn't happen, the DHS funding bill will not move forward.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to another day.
California officials said that eight of the nine skiers missing since an avalanche on Tuesday have died.
The avalanche now ranks as one of the deadliest in the state's modern history.
The skiers were part of a group of 15, including four guides,
on a three-day back-country expedition near Lake Tahoe.
Six of those who were caught in the avalanche were rescued
after they used a combination of emergency beacons and their iPhones to share their location.
The avalanche occurred after nearly three feet of snow had accumulated in the area over a short period.
Today's episode was produced by Mary Wilson and Eric Kruppke.
It was edited by Rachel Quester and Chris Haxel.
Contains music by Alicia Bledoop and Marion Lazzano,
and was engineered by Chris Wood.
Special thanks to Phil Corbett and Nick Pittman.
That's it for the daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.
