Mark Ruffalo, Wanda Sykes and Jean Smart declared their stance against ICE at the 2026 Golden Globes after Renee Good was killed by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent on Wednesday.
The âTaskâ actor, âHacksâ actress and comedian all wore âBe goodâ pins on their lapels to protest ICE at the awards show Sunday.
Sykes, 61, spoke to Variety about her statement accessory on the red carpet.
âOf course this is for the mother who was murdered by an ICE agent,â the actress told the outlet of the âreally sadâ shooting, which took place in Minnesota.
âI know people are out marching and all today, and we need to speak up,â Sykes continued. âWe need to be out there and shut this rogue government down because itâs just awful what theyâre doing to people.âÂ
The âUpshawsâ star rocked the white pin with black lettering on her shiny silver jacket, with Ruffaloâs pin on a cream suit.
Before Smart won her female actor in a television series â musical or comedy award, she told Entertainment Tonight that âeverythingâs kind of overshadowed by everything thatâs going on right now in our country.â
âI feel like weâre kind of at a turning point in this country,â she said in the red carpet interview. âI hope people can keep their heads because thatâs actually, really the hardest thing, I think, is to keep our heads. Itâs going to take a lot of courage and concerns, but I think thatâs important.â
Smart â who wore the pin on her white gown â defended her decision to speak out, saying, âI know that there are people who find it annoying when actors take opportunities to talk about social and political things, but Iâm not here right now speaking as an actor. Iâm here speaking as a citizen and a mom, and I hope people understand that.â
In another chat with Variety, she reiterated, âI donât think my opinion matters more than anybodyâs. Thatâs not at all what Iâm doing. I feel like if you feel strongly about something, and you have the chance to share your feelings or encourage people or cheer somebody on, you should do it.â
Smart added during her acceptance speech, âThereâs just a lot that could be said tonight. I said my rant on the red carpet, so I wonât do it here. But, thank you. Letâs all do the right thing. I think everybody in their hearts knows what the right thing to do is, so letâs do the right thing.â
The #BeGood campaign, organized by Marmot, Move On, National Domestic Workers Alliance, Working Families Power and âleaders from every sector of the entertainment industry,â is also meant to honor Keith Porter, who was killed by an off-duty ICE agent in Los Angeles on New Yearâs Eve.
The campaignâs goal is to remind people âto be good to one another in the face of such horror â to be a good citizen, neighbor, friend, ally and human.â
The ACLU has endorsed #BeGood, writing in a statement that âICE is not making our communities saferâ and, instead, âbringing chaos into our streets.â
While Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin characterized Goodâs death as self-defense against an act of âdomestic terrorismâ â Good allegedly âattempting to run over ⊠law enforcement officers in an attempt to kill themâ â Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey hit back at this claim.
âHaving seen the video myself, I want to tell everybody directly, that is bulls â â t,â the politician, 44, said in a press conference earlier this week. âThis was an agent recklessly using power that resulted in somebody dying, getting killed.
âGet the f â â k out of Minneapolis,â he told ICE. âWe do not want you here.â
One year before his âBe goodâ pin made headlines, Ruffalo â who lost the Golden Globe to Stellan SkarsgĂ„rd on Sunday â similarly used the red carpet as a protest opportunity.
The âSpotlightâ star, 58, along with Billie Eilish, Ava DuVernay and more A-listers, wore Artists4Ceasefire pins on the Oscars 2024 red carpet.
âThe pin symbolizes collective support for an immediate and permanent cease-fire [in the Israel-Hamas war], the release of all of the hostages and for the urgent delivery of humanitarian aid to civilians in Gaza,â the collective wrote in a statement last year. âCompassion must prevail.â
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