In a fiery pre-Super Bowl showdown, Green Day frontman Billie Joe Armstrong launched a blistering attack on ICE agents, warning them their "future looks bleak" and urging them to abandon their posts immediately.

The punk rock icon, set to ignite the Super Bowl LX opening ceremony this Sunday, dropped a political bombshell at an exclusive FanDuel-Spotify concert in San Francisco, directly confronting Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in a moment that's already going viral.

"This goes out to all the ICE agents out there, wherever you are," Armstrong declared from the Pier 29 stage, his voice cutting through the electric atmosphere. "Quit that sh***y job you have."

Billie Joe Armstrong unleashing political fury with Green Day at the American Music Awards in Los Angeles on Oct. 6, 2024. Rich Polk/Penske Media via Getty

Armstrong didn't stop there. He predicted a dramatic betrayal, warning ICE agents that Trump administration heavyweights would "drop you like a bad f***ing habit" when their political moment passes. "Kristi Noem, Stephen Miller, JD Vance, Donald Trump—they're gonna abandon you. Come on this side of the line," he challenged, drawing roaring applause from the crowd.

The singer then weaponized Green Day's classics, transforming "American Idiot" into an anti-MAGA anthem by swapping "redneck agenda" for "MAGA agenda," and shocking audiences by referencing "Epstein Island" during "Holiday." He dedicated the performance to Minneapolis, where recent ICE operations turned deadly, claiming the lives of Renée Good and Alex Pretti.

As the White House and Department of Homeland Security remain silent, Trump has already fired back, calling Green Day's Super Bowl selection "terrible" and accusing them of sowing hatred—a feud that's now exploding into a full-blown culture war just days before the big game.

President Donald Trump at the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 5, 2026. SAUL LOEB / AFP via Getty

This isn't Armstrong's first political salvo. From displaying a Trump mask labeled "IDIOT" at a 2024 D.C. concert to leading chants of "No Trump, no KKK, no fascist USA," he's built a reputation as Trump's fiercest musical foe—even comparing him to Hitler during the 2016 campaign.

With the Super Bowl stage looming, Armstrong's ICE takedown has set the internet ablaze, turning a pre-game party into a political battlefield. Will his words spark a rebellion among agents, or deepen America's divides? One thing's clear: Green Day's performance just became the most controversial moment in Super Bowl history.