Skip to content
June 16, 2026
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Youtube
  • Whatsapp

Caribbean Broadcasting Corporation

The most credible news source in Barbados

Advertising with CBC

Connect with Us

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Youtube
  • Whatsapp

Categories

Advertise Barbadiana Business Caribbean News Carousel casino Channel 8 Community Covid-19 News Entertainment News Health In Memoeiam International News Lifestyle Local News News Newsbeat Notices Obituaries Politics Regional News Science Soca Showdown Sports Stories Tech Technology Tourism Trending Uncategorized Weather We Gatherin' 2025 World

Tags

Barbados Barbados Labour Party Barbados Meteorological Services Barbados Police Service Caribbean CARICOM China Court COVID-19 COVID-19 pandemic COVID-19 related death COVID-19 Vaccination COVID-19 vaccine cricket crime Dashboard Death Deaths Donald Trump education Election football Forecast Gaza Guyana Haiti Hamas Israel Israel-Hamas war Jamaica Met Office police Police Investigation Queen Elizabeth Hospital Russia shooting Tourism Trinidad and Tobago Ukraine United States Vaccination vaccinations Weather West Indies West Indies Cricket
Primary Menu
  • News
    • Local News
    • Regional
    • International
    • Business
    • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Weather
  • Events
    • Live Events
  • Radio
    • 98.1 The One
      • LIVE Radio
    • Vibe 94.7 FM
      • LIVE Radio
    • Q100.7 FM
      • LIVE Radio
  • TV 8
    • TV Guide
  • MCTV
  • About Us
    • Contact Us
LIVE TV
  • Home
  • News
  • International News
  • Trump wants to rebrand ICE as NICE

Trump wants to rebrand ICE as NICE

admin Published: May 12, 2026 | Updated: May 12, 2026 4 minutes read
ICE-agents-February-4-2026-Minneapolis-Minnesota--BY--John-Moore--Getty-Images-via-CNN-Newsource-

ICE agents depart the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building on February 4, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (John Moore/Getty Images via CNN Newsource)

By Michael Williams, Priscilla Alvarez, CNN

(CNN) — President Donald Trump has made clear on social media and in interviews that he thinks Immigration and Customs Enforcement needs a rebrand — more specifically, a new name: National Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or NICE.

Whether that change will move forward, in the form of an executive order, or whether it will just be a meme, has been the topic of internal debate at the White House and the Department of Homeland Security.

The idea to change the name of ICE — which would require an act of Congress, not simply an executive order — appears to have originated on social media. In late April, the president shared to his Truth Social account a screenshot of a suggestion made on X that the name be changed “so the media has to say NICE agents all day.”

“GREAT IDEA!!! DO IT,” the president wrote on Truth Social.

Since then, both the White House and the Department of Homeland Security, the Cabinet agency that oversees ICE, have shared memes to their social media accounts endorsing the name change. As the memes took off, officials at ICE remained on standby in case the White House chose to move forward with a name change and crunched numbers on what that would look like, from changing stationary to vests, per a source familiar.

Trump said he’s felt pushback from rank-and-file officers, along with the White House’s border czar, Tom Homan, who were not as enthusiastic.

“But I’m not sure that the guys liked it, because … I think they like their image of being strong, and they’ve done a great job,” he said during a Tuesday interview on WABC’s “Sid and Friends in the Morning.”

A spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement that “the NICE men and women of ICE continue to risk their lives to arrest and remove criminal illegal aliens from American communities.”

A White House official denied that a name change was ever seriously being considered.

“This has always just been a fun meme to troll the libs – and it’s worked!” the official said. “Ultimately, President Trump always wants to do what’s in the best interest of the men and women who keep Americans safe.”

ICE has been perhaps the most heavily and publicly scrutinized federal agency in Trump’s second term, as its agents have deployed nationwide to conduct at-times controversial immigration arrests.

Following the shooting of US citizen Renee Good by an ICE officer in Minneapolis in January, public opinion polling found that slightly more than half of Americans believed the agency was making US cities less safe.

Aware of that criticism, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin has frequently said he wants to take a “quiet” approach to immigration enforcement while maintaining an aggressive posture.

“We’re staying focused on all illegals, without question,” Mullin, who took over DHS in March, told Newsmax last week. “We’re purposefully trying to be a little more quiet. … That doesn’t mean we’re slowing down even a little bit.”

ICE was created by the Homeland Security Act of 2002, the post-9/11 law enacted by Congress that also created the Department of Homeland Security. Because the agency was created by Congress, changing its name would require congressional action.

But such technicalities have not prevented the administration from acting outside of its authority to change agencies’ names in the past.

In September, the president signed an executive order renaming the Department of Defense to the Department of War — reverting the Cabinet agency’s moniker to one was used from the end of the American Revolution to the end of World War II.

The Congressional Budget Office estimated earlier this year that the Department of Defense rebrand could cost up to $125 million. It’s not clear how much the ICE rebrand could cost; the Department of Defense is a much larger entity than ICE. But if the immigration agency commits to a rebrand, it would require extensive changes to everything from official letterhead and email addresses to building facades, badges and patches, and vehicle decals.

Trump officials and allies have also moved to add the president’s name to the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and the US Institute of Peace, despite questions about whether they could do so without congressional approval.

The White House has shown a willingness to lash out at those who do not use the president’s preferred nomenclature.

Shortly after Trump was inaugurated for the second time, he signed an executive order directing the Department of the Interior to redesignate the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America. After the Associated Press declined to use the administration’s preferred name in its written copy, the White House sought to ban the AP from covering some events with the president.

The AP sued over those restrictions, and that litigation is ongoing.

This article has been updated with additional developments.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

Post navigation

Previous: RSS warns of growing transnational crime threat in the Caribbean
Next: T&T: Body of toddler found at sea

Related Stories

Shantal-Munro-Knight-Barbados-
1 minute read

Barbados’ food import bill rises to $13.76 billion

admin June 15, 2026
Rodney-Taylor-Caribbean-Telecommunications-Union-
1 minute read

CTU congratulates Barbados on successful BimPay launch

admin June 15, 2026
Bim-Pay-
1 minute read

BimPay system functioning effectively, says Central Bank Governor

admin June 15, 2026
Aviation-Aeronautical-Information-Services-Course-Air-Navigation-Services-Department-of-Civil-Aviation-
1 minute read

Aviation graduates encouraged to drive industry forward

admin June 15, 2026
Fisherman-Jefferson-Firebrace-Fishing-Tent-Bay-fishing-village.-
1 minute read

Fisherfolk hopeful outstanding issues will be addressed

admin June 15, 2026
Ryan-Straughn-Barbados-
1 minute read

Finance Minister calls for united effort to support youth

admin June 15, 2026

Regional News

Government reaffirms commitment to protecting vulnerable citizens Adrian-Forde- 1

Government reaffirms commitment to protecting vulnerable citizens

June 15, 2026
Barbados’ food import bill rises to $13.76 billion Shantal-Munro-Knight-Barbados- 2

Barbados’ food import bill rises to $13.76 billion

June 15, 2026
CTU congratulates Barbados on successful BimPay launch Rodney-Taylor-Caribbean-Telecommunications-Union- 3

CTU congratulates Barbados on successful BimPay launch

June 15, 2026
BimPay system functioning effectively, says Central Bank Governor Bim-Pay- 4

BimPay system functioning effectively, says Central Bank Governor

June 15, 2026
CBC NewsNIght Promo
Advertise with CBC. Contact at Tel: 1 (246) 467-5400 or marketing@cbc.bb
Subscribe to CBC WhatsApp
Subscribe to CBC WhatsApp

Most Viewed News

Magnitude 6.0 earthquake shakes Barbados earth quake 1

Magnitude 6.0 earthquake shakes Barbados

June 5, 2026
Barbadians being urged not to kill centipedes centipiede 2

Barbadians being urged not to kill centipedes

November 18, 2025
Father mourns second son killed by the gun Andy-Robinson-Lyle-Robinson-SHooting-death- 3

Father mourns second son killed by the gun

April 20, 2026
US suspending immigrant visa processing for 75 countries including Barbados us_visa_information 4

US suspending immigrant visa processing for 75 countries including Barbados

January 14, 2026
Police probing unnatural death of English visitor in St. James police car-Stock-Photo- 5

Police probing unnatural death of English visitor in St. James

January 24, 2026
Rules-based order critical for small states, says PM Mottley mia positon 6

Rules-based order critical for small states, says PM Mottley

January 3, 2026
DLP Leader did not vote in today’s election Ralph-Thorne-Democratic-Labour-Party-Election-Barbados- 7

DLP Leader did not vote in today’s election

February 12, 2026

Tags

Barbados Barbados Labour Party Barbados Meteorological Services Barbados Police Service Caribbean CARICOM China Court COVID-19 COVID-19 pandemic COVID-19 related death COVID-19 Vaccination COVID-19 vaccine cricket crime Dashboard Death Deaths Donald Trump education Election football Forecast Gaza Guyana Haiti Hamas Israel Israel-Hamas war Jamaica Met Office police Police Investigation Queen Elizabeth Hospital Russia shooting Tourism Trinidad and Tobago Ukraine United States Vaccination vaccinations Weather West Indies West Indies Cricket

Connect with Us

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Youtube
  • Whatsapp

You may have missed

Adrian-Forde-
1 minute read

Government reaffirms commitment to protecting vulnerable citizens

admin June 15, 2026
Shantal-Munro-Knight-Barbados-
1 minute read

Barbados’ food import bill rises to $13.76 billion

admin June 15, 2026
Rodney-Taylor-Caribbean-Telecommunications-Union-
1 minute read

CTU congratulates Barbados on successful BimPay launch

admin June 15, 2026
Bim-Pay-
1 minute read

BimPay system functioning effectively, says Central Bank Governor

admin June 15, 2026

Recent Posts

  • Government reaffirms commitment to protecting vulnerable citizens June 15, 2026
  • Barbados’ food import bill rises to $13.76 billion June 15, 2026
  • CTU congratulates Barbados on successful BimPay launch June 15, 2026
  • BimPay system functioning effectively, says Central Bank Governor June 15, 2026
  • Aviation graduates encouraged to drive industry forward June 15, 2026

Tags

Barbados Barbados Labour Party Barbados Meteorological Services Barbados Police Service Caribbean CARICOM China Court COVID-19 COVID-19 pandemic COVID-19 related death COVID-19 Vaccination COVID-19 vaccine cricket crime Dashboard Death Deaths Donald Trump education Election football Forecast Gaza Guyana Haiti Hamas Israel Israel-Hamas war Jamaica Met Office police Police Investigation Queen Elizabeth Hospital Russia shooting Tourism Trinidad and Tobago Ukraine United States Vaccination vaccinations Weather West Indies West Indies Cricket
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Youtube
  • Whatsapp
Copyright © All rights reserved Caribbean Broadcasting Corporation 2026