Pull to refresh
Logo
Daily Brief
Following
Why Ranks Sign Up
Robin Kelly

Robin Kelly

United States Representative

Appears in 3 stories

Born: 1956 (age 69 years), New York, NY
Office: United States Representative
Spouse: Nathaniel Horn (m. 2003)
Education: Northern Illinois University (2004), Bradley University (1980–1982), Bradley University (1977), and more
Party: Democratic Party of Illinois
Previous office: Illinois State Representative (2003–2007)
Descendants: Kelly Horn and Ryan Horn

Notable Quotes

"Secretary Noem has abused her office for personal benefit, willfully obstructed Congressional oversight, and compromised public safety through unconstitutional actions."

Stories

States sue to stop federal immigration surge

Force in Play

Lead sponsor of impeachment articles against DHS Secretary Noem

U.S. District Judge Katherine Menendez denied Minnesota's request for a temporary restraining order against Operation Metro Surge on February 2, 2026. She cited insufficient proof of constitutional violations, though she acknowledged evidence of racial profiling and excessive force.

Updated May 20

ICE blocks congressional oversight after fatal Minneapolis shooting

Force in Play

Leading impeachment effort with 162 House Democratic co-sponsors as of January 28, three-fourths of caucus

Three Minnesota congresswomen entered a Minneapolis ICE detention center on January 10 but were ordered out minutes later. They'd come three days after an ICE agent shot 37-year-old U.S. citizen Renee Good in the head during what the Trump administration called the largest immigration enforcement operation ever. DHS Secretary Kristi Noem secretly signed a seven-day notice rule the day after Good's killing—a rule a federal judge had already blocked—and Judge Jia Cobb refused to block it on January 20.

Updated May 20

Federal agent kills Minneapolis woman during Trump's mass deportation campaign

Force in Play

Leading impeachment effort against Noem

An ICE agent shot Renee Nicole Good through her car window on a Minneapolis street January 7, killing the 37-year-old mother instantly. Federal officials claimed self-defense, saying Good weaponized her Honda Pilot to ram agents. But video shows something different: a woman slowly backing up and pulling forward, trying to leave, before an officer fires three shots into her head. "Having seen the video myself, that is bullshit," said Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey. The shooter: Jonathan Ross, a 43-year-old deportation officer who was dragged fifty yards by a vehicle he tried to forcibly enter just six months earlier. Seventeen days later, on January 24, Border Patrol agents shot and killed Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse and legal gun owner. Video shows Pretti filming agents with his phone, getting pepper-sprayed, wrestled to the ground by six agents, then shot at least ten times. DHS claimed he was armed and violent. Video evidence again contradicts the official account. At least six federal prosecutors resigned in protest over how investigations were being handled—pressure to investigate victims' families rather than the shooters. On January 24, FBI agent Tracee Mergen, supervisor of the Public Corruption Squad in Minneapolis, resigned over pressure to "reclassify/discontinue the investigation" into Good's killing and focus instead on her widow Becca. Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O'Hara noted that two of the city's three homicides in 2026 were committed by federal agents.

Updated May 19