Gabe Vasquez votes against DHS funding, attacks ICE as race tightens
U.S. Rep. Gabe Vasquez is once again facing scrutiny after joining other New Mexico Democrat congressional representatives, Teresa Leger Fernandez (CD-3) and Melanie Stansbury (CD-1), and voting against advancing funding for the Department of Homeland Security while simultaneously launching another rhetorical broadside against Immigration and Customs Enforcement, a move likely to further inflame concerns among moderates in his increasingly competitive southern New Mexico district.
Vasquez joined House Democrats this week in opposing a Republican-backed budget framework designed to unlock funding for border enforcement and immigration operations through the reconciliation process. According to Fox News, the House approved the measure 215–211, with every Democrat present voting against it while Republicans unanimously supported it.
The vote comes as the Department of Homeland Security has been operating under a funding lapse for more than 70 days, with the White House warning that DHS personnel could soon go unpaid if funding is not restored. According to Fox News, the administration has warned that absent congressional action, personnel including Secret Service agents, Coast Guard members, and other DHS employees could miss paychecks beginning in May. Vasquez in early April visited the Albuquerque Sunport to claim to support TSA agents, despite repeatedly voting against funding them via DHS.
But rather than support the funding measure, Vasquez issued a press release celebrating his opposition and attacking ICE directly.
“ICE doesn’t need another blank check to bankroll more violence, mass detention, and assaults on American citizens,” Vasquez said. He further blasted the proposal as a “slush fund” and accused immigration enforcement authorities of engaging in “racial profiling of Hispanic people and communities.”
The comments are likely to provide fresh ammunition to Republicans already targeting Vasquez as out of step with his district on immigration and public safety.
Earlier this month, Vasquez fled New Mexico for El Paso to attempt to close down the Texas-based ICE facility, Camp East Montana, claiming it is dangerous and unsafe, despite so many facts to the contrary.
National Republicans quickly seized on the vote, arguing it further demonstrates Vasquez’s hostility toward immigration enforcement and law enforcement generally.
The latest vote adds to a growing record of anti-ICE positioning by the Democrat congressman. Vasquez previously called for Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s impeachment and has repeatedly pushed legislation demanding tighter restrictions and oversight on ICE detention and removal operations.
His stance comes at a time when immigration remains one of the top concerns for voters nationally and in New Mexico’s 2nd Congressional District, a border-heavy battleground seat Republicans are aggressively targeting in 2026.
The timing may also prove politically awkward for Vasquez given the broader national climate surrounding Democrats and immigration enforcement.
His vote comes amid mounting criticism of Democrat politicians increasingly adopting anti-ICE rhetoric, including some on the left openly calling for the agency’s abolition. That broader trend has become a political flashpoint as Republicans seek to tie vulnerable Democrats to what they portray as radical immigration positions.
Republicans are already framing NM-02 as one of their top pickup opportunities in the country, with GOP challenger Greg Cunningham receiving backing from President Donald Trump, House GOP leadership, and the National Republican Congressional Committee, as the Piñon Post previously reported on.
With the race expected to be one of the most competitive in the nation, Vasquez’s continued opposition to border enforcement funding and his repeated attacks on ICE may further complicate his efforts to hold onto a district that Trump carried in 2024.
For Republicans, the message is straightforward: Gabe Vasquez is once again siding against immigration enforcement and DHS funding while border security remains a top concern for voters.
Whether that message resonates with swing voters in southern New Mexico may help determine who wins one of the most hotly contested congressional races of 2026.
Gabe Vasquez votes against DHS funding, attacks ICE as race tightens Read More »