Global superstar Jennifer Lopez, known to millions as J.Lo, has delivered one of her most explicit condemnations of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). In a reported exclusive interview, the singer and actress shared a powerful critique rooted in her own family’s experience and her deep identification with the broader Latino community’s struggles.

“I hate ICE because they don’t protect the border – they destroy families,” Lopez reportedly shared. “As the daughter of immigrants, I see them tearing people apart like my parents.

This forceful dialogue response from Lopez, whose success story embodies the American Dream, highlights the contradiction between that national promise and the reality faced by many immigrant families.

May be an image of text that says 'A V POLICE + POLICE CE NEWS "I hate ICE because they destroy families": J.Lo levels explosive criticism at agency, exposing the truth behind 6 million US citizen children affected by deportations'

 Rooted in Puerto Rican Identity

 

Lopez’s unique perspective stems from her identity as a New York native whose parents, Guadalupe Rodríguez and David Lopez, were born in Puerto Rico. Although all Puerto Ricans are U.S. citizens by birthright, Lopez has often spoken about the prejudice she faced early in her career. She noted being typecast, initially only offered roles “playing the maid or the loudmouth Latina” before she broke barriers, most notably with the titular lead role in the 1997 biographical film Selena.

Despite her citizenship status, her upbringing and experiences have fostered a profound empathy with the challenges faced by non-citizen immigrants, positioning her critique of ICE as a defense of the entire Latino experience in America.

 

💔 Data and the Attack on Family Stability

 

Lopez’s anger over “destroying families” is backed by stark demographic realities and data. As of 2020, Hispanics made up 19% of the U.S. population (62.1 million people). The impact of deportations is pervasive: an estimated 6 million U.S.-citizen children have at least one undocumented parent.

These enforcement policies directly undermine the ability of Latino communities to achieve stability and upward mobility. While Pew Research Center surveys indicate Latinos are statistically more likely to believe in the core tenets of the American Dream, a 2016 survey found that nearly 74% of Latinos felt achieving that dream was difficult for people like them. The economic impact is significant; policies that cause family separation exacerbate difficulties in building wealth, further deepening existing disparities (in 2019, the average Latino family had only $36,000 in wealth compared to $189,000 for white families).

 

📢 The 2018 Mobilization: Latino Artists Respond

 

Lopez’s statement arrives within a continuing legacy of activism that gained significant momentum around the 2018 boycott of ICE campaigns. That summer saw the Trump administration’s “zero-tolerance” policy at the border lead to the separation of thousands of children from their parents, sparking nationwide Occupy ICE protests outside federal facilities.

The artistic community mirrored the public outcry. Latino artists and musicians leveraged their platforms to organize, protest, and provide support, joining figures like pop star Becky G and Maná frontman Fher Olvera in publicly denouncing raids and family separation. Notably, artists in Los Angeles organized exhibits, such as “Chinga la Migra,” to raise funds for immigrant rights groups, successfully turning art into a visible, powerful form of political protest against enforcement actions.

For Jennifer Lopez, a self-described “proud daughter and son of Puerto Rico,” her willingness to use her global visibility to put a spotlight on family separation insists that the fight is fundamentally about the right of all people to chase the American Dream “with dignity and respect.”

Would you like to know more about Jennifer Lopez’s other projects that address social or political issues, or details on the role she played in the film Selena?