J.D. Vance’s Minneapolis appearance was already controversial ahead of time. Then the Vice President doubled down, and Minnesotans aren’t happy.
In a YouTube video now circulating widely online, Vance repeatedly framed Minneapolis as the source of the crisis, insisting that ICE is not the problem, despite mounting evidence, protests, and the recent killing of Renee Nicole Good. The reaction from Minnesotans was immediate and furious, with a Reddit discussion exploding into one of the most hostile receptions yet for the administration’s immigration messaging.
At the center of the outrage was Vance’s claim that ICE agents felt unsafe while dining at a restaurant due to civilian protesters. For many locals, the comment landed as tone deaf at best and grotesque at worst.
“He talked about how ICE agents at a restaurant were concerned for their safety,” one Redditor wrote. “Hello Vance, welcome to the world of being brown in MN right now. My husband has been too scared to leave the house for weeks because of what ICE is doing here.”
That comment alone racked up more than 1,500 upvotes, setting the tone for a thread dominated by anger, disbelief, and dark humor. Another user responded bluntly, saying this is “the world his own kids will have to live in if we don’t stop it,” calling Vance a buffoon for his refusal to grasp the reality on the ground.
Much of the discussion focused on what users described as a familiar tactic: portraying ICE as both heroic and victimized while dismissing civilian fear as irrelevant. “The heroes AND the victims,” one commenter wrote. “Make it make sense.”
Others went further, accusing Vance of textbook DARVO behavior: deny, attack, reverse victim and offender. “They are always heroic victims in their own minds,” another user added, a line that quickly became one of the most quoted takeaways from the thread.
Several commenters also pointed out what they see as rank hypocrisy. Vance warned that anyone who assaults law enforcement would face the full force of the state, a statement many contrasted with the administration’s pardons of January 6 rioters who assaulted police officers. “Which is rich,” one user noted, “coming from the same people.”
Beyond the rage, some users offered a colder political read. Vance, they argued, is being deployed precisely because the message is unpopular. “Whenever you see Vance out front,” one commenter wrote, “it means the admin doesn’t want Trump directly associated with it.”
If the goal of the visit was to steady the narrative, Reddit’s verdict is brutal. From Minneapolis to the wider state, many citizens feel blamed, dismissed, and gaslit. As one commenter summed it up simply, “There is no middle ground with fascists.”
For Minnesota, the temperature has not lowered. If anything, Vance’s comments poured fuel directly onto an already raging fire.







