
Davis Ingle
White House spokesperson who praised the 2026 World Cup as "safest ever" while refusing to address FIFA's ICE moratorium request.
Last refreshed: 19 April 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Why won't the White House respond to FIFA's request for an ICE moratorium during the World Cup?
Timeline for Davis Ingle
Praised tournament as 'safest in history' and declined to address ICE
2026 FIFA World Cup: Infantino tells CNBC Iran 'for sure'Mentioned in: FIFA executives push ICE moratorium ask
2026 FIFA World CupBackground
Davis Ingle is a White House spokesperson who publicly praised the 2026 FIFA World Cup as "the safest and most secure World Cup in history" while declining to address FIFA's request that the Trump administration impose a 39-day ICE moratorium across all host cities for the duration of the tournament. His response is the administration's clearest public signal that no moratorium will be forthcoming.
Ingle's formulation — effusive on tournament security, silent on the immigration enforcement question — reflects the structural tension in the Trump administration's World Cup posture. The administration is invested in the tournament as an economic and prestige event (President Infantino cited WTO projections of $80.1bn in gross output and 200,000 permanent jobs), while simultaneously running the enforcement operations that FIFA's own executives regard as existential threats to Iran's participation and international visitor safety.
By declining to engage with the moratorium question, Ingle effectively confirmed that the White House has no intention of limiting federal enforcement authority at FIFA's request, forcing FIFA to absorb the political and safety risk itself. Senior FIFA executives had pressed Gianni Infantino to ask Trump personally for the moratorium; as of 19 April, Infantino had made no public request.