Cracks in the Party - How the Death of Alex Pretti Is Turning Even Republicans Against the Federal Government

byRainer Hofmann

January 26, 2026

The fatal shooting of Alex Pretti has triggered a development that for a long time was considered unthinkable even within the Republican Party. For the first time since the start of the intensified federal operations in Minnesota, numerous Republican members of Congress and senators are publicly calling for an independent investigation into the conduct of Border Patrol and immigration authorities. Not out of tactical distance, but out of openly articulated doubt about the government’s official account. While the Department of Homeland Security portrayed Pretti immediately after the incident as a violent agitator, numerous videos now show a different sequence. Pretti is seen holding a mobile phone, not a drawn weapon. He is shoved, then brought to the ground by multiple officers. Only afterward is a firearm removed from him, which he was legally carrying. The shots are fired seconds later. These images cause central government claims to collapse.

“The memorial site for Alex Pretti in Minneapolis is currently being visited by many people.”

Republican voices from both chambers of Congress are responding with unusual clarity. Several senators and representatives are demanding a comprehensive federal and state level investigation, emphasizing the need for parliamentary oversight and warning against the political instrumentalization of premature accusations. Particularly striking is that this criticism does not come from fringe figures, but from within the party’s inner power center. The case brings several core Republican convictions into conflict. The right to bear arms clashes with the portrayal of an armed citizen as a threat. Federalism collides with massive federal operations in individual cities. And the traditional distrust of state power is suddenly directed against a government of their own.

Republican governors are also speaking out. They talk about a lack of coordination, escalating operations, and an atmosphere that deters rather than creates security. Some openly warn of intimidation of the population by federal authorities. Others demand a clear political definition of objectives: what exactly is meant to be achieved by these operations, and where does their legitimacy end. At the same time, the case is increasing internal party pressure on the administration. Polls show a significant loss of trust in migration policy. What long counted as a strength is increasingly being perceived as a risk. The death of yet another US citizen strikes a sensitive nerve - including among advocates of gun rights.

Especially sensitive is the comparison now being drawn more and more frequently. In the past, fatal shootings during protests were defended, downplayed, or politically charged by conservative actors. Now those same circles are being forced to reassess the consequences of this ideology. The statement that carrying a weapon is not a death sentence is suddenly coming from Republican ranks themselves. The death of Alex Pretti is thus more than another point of escalation on the streets of Minneapolis. It is a political stress test for a party that until now had stood united behind the government’s hard line. Whether real consequences will follow remains open. One thing is certain: the silence has been broken.

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