Norms Impact
MAGA Senator Frantically Deletes Wild Post After Blowback
A U.S. senator used a cartel image to score points in the ICE masking fight, then deleted the evidence—testing whether public power can inflame the nation without leaving a public record.
Feb 23, 2026
Sources
Summary
Sen. Mike Lee posted an image of masked Mexican cartel members on X to argue that “leftists” should not object to ICE agents wearing masks, then deleted the post after backlash from Democratic senators. The incident reflects a sitting U.S. senator using personal social media to inject polarizing, law-enforcement-adjacent messaging into national politics and then attempting to erase the record. The practical consequence is a corrosion of accountability as elected officials can stoke conflict, provoke reaction, and retreat without formal retraction or apology.
Reality Check
This conduct normalizes a dangerous precedent: officials can broadcast inflammatory claims about law enforcement, trigger harassment and distrust, and then erase the trail that voters need to judge them. Deleting a post is not likely criminal on these facts; nothing here indicates obstruction of an official proceeding (18 U.S.C. §§ 1505, 1512) or a records offense tied to government systems. The violation is institutional: we are watching a senator treat public communication like disposable propaganda—no apology, no correction, no accountability—while the policy stakes involve state power and people’s rights.
Media
Detail
<p>On Sunday afternoon, Utah Sen. Mike Lee, 54, posted to X from his personal account @BasedMikeLee a photo of masked Mexican cartel members. In the post, Lee wrote: “Cartel hitmen wear masks. Leftists aren’t complaining,” framing it as a response to arguments that ICE agents should not wear masks to conceal their identities.</p><p>Several Democrats replied directly. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer responded, “Yes. Cartel hitmen wear masks. That’s why ICE shouldn’t.” Sen. Chris Murphy wrote, “The bad guys wear masks. The good guys don’t.” Sen. Brian Schatz wrote that he wanted ICE held to “the same standards as a local police department, not cartel hitmen.”</p><p>By Monday, the post was no longer available; the deletion time is not specified. The pattern mirrors June 2025, when Lee tweeted and deleted posts blaming “liberals” and “Marxists” after the assassination of Minnesota state Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband, and did not issue an official apology.</p>