Pennsylvania’s Republican senator took to social media Sunday to express support for federal immigration enforcement agencies, while his Democratic counterpart has refrained from issuing any public statements on the situation.

U.S. Sen. Dave McCormick’s social media comments came a day after the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti, 37, by border patrol agents in Minneapolis. Earlier this month, Renee Good, 37, was fatally shot by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent.

Several Trump administration officials have justified the latest shooting, though certain aspects of their account appeared to be contradicted by bystander videos verified by news media outlets and witness accounts.

“As I have often said, I support the Border Patrol, ICE, and the critical work they do to enforce our laws,” McCormick, a Republican from Pittsburgh’s Squirrel Hill neighborhood, wrote Sunday evening on X. “Irresponsible rhetoric and a lack of cooperation from Minnesota’s politicians are fueling a dangerous situation. I also agree with the NRA and others — we need a full investigation into the tragedy in Minneapolis. We need all the facts.

“We must enforce our laws in a way that protects the public while maintaining its trust,” McCormick continued. “This gives our law enforcement officers the best chance to succeed in their difficult mission.”

U.S. Sen. John Fetterman, D-Braddock, has not issued any public statements on the immigration crackdown and related unrest in Minneapolis following Pretti’s killing. His office did not immediately respond to questions from TribLive.

Earlier this month, following the fatal shooting of Good, Fetterman rejected calls from some fellow Democrats to abolish ICE.

“The party must resist the destructive tendencies to push extreme positions,” Fetterman wrote on X at the time. “Secure the border. Deport all the criminals. Stop targeting the hardworking migrants in our nation.”

Fetterman’s wife, Gisele, weighed in on the turmoil in Minnesota on Sunday evening.

“For more than a decade, I lived undocumented in the U.S. Every day carried the same uncertainty and fear in my body — a tight chest, shallow breaths, racing heart,” Gisele Fetterman wrote a post on her protected X account, shared by the Daily Mail.

“What I thought was my private, chronic dread has now become a shared national wound. This now-daily violence is not ‘law and order,’” Gisele Fetterman added. “It is terror inflicted on people who contribute, love and build their lives here. It’s devastatingly cruel and unAmerican.”