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Zach Bryan's ICE Lyrics Spark White House Backlash: 'Americans Disagree'

Published 1 hour ago2 minute read
Precious Eseaye
Precious Eseaye
Zach Bryan's ICE Lyrics Spark White House Backlash: 'Americans Disagree'

Country music star Zach Bryan has sparked a significant controversy with the United States government over a snippet of an unreleased song. The lyric, “ICE is gonna come bust down your door,” from the forthcoming track has drawn immediate criticism from the White House, even before its official release.

On Tuesday, October 7, a representative for the White House, Abigail Jackson, issued a statement to Newsweek, expressing strong disapproval of Bryan’s unreleased music. Jackson, seemingly familiar with Bryan’s discography, artfully incorporated titles of his other songs into her critique. She stated, “While Zach Bryan wants to Open the Gates to criminal illegal aliens and has Condemned heroic ICE officers, Something in the Orange tells me a majority of Americans disagree with him and support President Trump’s great American Revival. Godspeed, Zach!”

The snippet in question was shared by Bryan on Instagram four days prior to the White House's statement. The full verse provided by Bryan includes the lines: “I heard the cops came/ Cocky motherf—kers, ain’t they?/ And ICE is gonna come bust down your door/ Try to build a house no one builds no more/ But I got a telephone/ Kids are all scared and all alone.” Bryan captioned the post with the poignant phrase, “The fading of the red white and blue.”

Despite having previously been photographed with Donald Trump, Bryan''s new lyrics suggest a stance against the White House’s current mass deportation policies, a promise President Trump has reiterated throughout his 2024 campaign. This position aligns him with numerous other artists who have voiced concerns regarding U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids on immigrant communities across the country.

The White House was not the only government entity to weigh in on Bryan's music. Also on Tuesday, Tricia McLaughlin, the assistant secretary of public affairs to the Department of Homeland Security, offered a more direct piece of advice to Billboard: “Stick to ‘Pink Skies,’ dude.” Billboard has reportedly reached out to Bryan’s representatives for comment.

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