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Google Employees Demand End to ICE Ties in Open Letter

Nearly 1,000 Google employees have signed an open letter urging the company’s top leadership to immediately sever ties with the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS), including Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP). The letter reflects growing internal dissent over Google’s government contracts, which employees allege are contributing to surveillance, repression, and human rights violations across the United States.
The open letter, circulated internally and shared among employees affiliated with advocacy group No Tech for Apartheid, calls for transparency, accountability, and urgent action from Google executives. The signatories argue that the company’s cloud computing and artificial intelligence tools are being used in ways that conflict with Google’s publicly stated ethical values.

Employees Cite Ethical and Human Rights Concerns

In the letter, employees accuse ICE and CBP of conducting aggressive enforcement actions that they describe as “paramilitary-style raids” across multiple US cities. They allege that these actions have led to humanitarian crises, including deaths in detention centres and violent confrontations with civilians and protestors.

The signatories claim that Google’s technology plays a direct role in supporting these operations. According to the letter, Google Cloud infrastructure is used to integrate CBP surveillance systems and supports third-party platforms that assist ICE in tracking immigrants. Employees also raise concerns over the use of generative AI tools by DHS agencies to enhance operational efficiency.

Demand for Transparency and Leadership Accountability

A central demand of the letter is full disclosure of Google’s contracts and collaborations with DHS, ICE, and CBP. Employees say leadership responses to previous internal questions have been vague and inconsistent, often filtered through AI-generated summaries that obscure critical details.

The workers are calling for a live, US-based town hall meeting where executives answer employee questions directly, without automated summarisation. They argue that meaningful dialogue is essential to rebuilding trust between leadership and the workforce.

Worker Safety at the Forefront

Beyond ethical objections, the letter highlights growing fears about employee safety. The signatories claim that ICE agents have already visited Google facilities, creating anxiety among workers, particularly contractors, temporary staff, and data centre employees who may have fewer protections.

The employees are urging leadership to implement safety measures such as flexible work-from-home policies, legal assistance, and immigration support services. They argue that Google has a responsibility to protect all workers, regardless of their employment status.

Call to Define Ethical Red Lines

The letter also demands that Google clearly define “red lines” governing how its products can be used by government agencies. Employees want explicit assurances that Google’s cloud and AI technologies will not be deployed for what they describe as state violence or repression.

Citing statements made earlier this year by Google Chief Scientist Jeff Dean about the responsibility to speak up against injustice, the employees say they are compelled to act when company actions contradict its stated principles.

Growing Tech Industry Pushback

The open letter adds to a broader movement within the global tech industry, where workers increasingly question corporate involvement in government surveillance and military projects. Similar protests have previously emerged at major technology firms over defence and law enforcement contracts.

As of publication, Google has not issued an official response to the letter. Employees say they will continue gathering signatures and pushing for a company-wide response until their demands are addressed.

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