ABC News June 20, 2018

Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen heckled at Mexican restaurant over immigration

WATCH: Homeland Security secretary heckled at Mexican restaurant

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen -- a fierce defender of the Trump administration's "zero-tolerance" policy toward immigration -- was heckled by a group of protesters while eating dinner at a Mexican restaurant Tuesday evening.

A group calling itself the Metro DC Democratic Socialists of America camped out next to Nielsen's table and chanted slogans and hurled loaded questions at Nielsen, who on Monday stood with White House press secretary Sarah Sanders at a briefing and praised the administration's handling of illegal immigrants coming into the country.

Social Media/via Reuters
In this photo obtained from social media, activists chant slogans as they interrupt U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen's (top R) dinner at a restaurant in Washington, D.C., June 19, 2018.

The president's "zero-tolerance" policy has generated impassioned arguments over the past few weeks, while support for ending the separation of children and parents has come from both sides of the aisle.

President Donald Trump, who met with Republican lawmakers at the White House on Tuesday night, has mostly deflected criticism -- either blaming Democrats in Congress, or, reportedly, asking the GOP lawmakers to take care of the issue in Tuesday's get-together.

The group shouted, "You’re eating a Mexican dinner as you’re deporting tens of thousands of people separated from their parents," and chanted "No borders, no walls, sanctuary for all," among other slogans.

Social Media/via Reuters
Activists chant slogans as they interrupt U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen's (top R) dinner at a restaurant in Washington, D.C., June 19, 2018, in this photo obtained from social media.
(MORE: Nielsen defends family separation as simply enforcing the law: 'We will not apologize') (MORE: Trump charts immigration strategy with House GOP amid family separation uproar)

Members also shouted "Have you listened to it? Have you heard the babies crying? Do you hear them crying?" in reference to the audio tape first leaked by ProPublica on Monday purporting to be a recording of immigrant children crying and begging for their parents. Nielsen was asked similar questions at the Monday briefing and she deflected.

"I have not seen something that came out today but I've been to detention centers and again I would reference you to our standards and reference you to the care provided not just by the Department of Homeland Security, but by the Department of Health and Human Services when they get to HHS," she said Monday.

AP
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen calls on a reporter during the daily briefing at the White House in Washington, Monday, June 18, 2018.

Nielsen told attendees at a sheriffs conference the same day that children were treated well at detention facilities.

"It is important to note that these minors are very well taken care of -- don't believe the press. They are very well taken care of, we know this because many of you have detention facilities of your own."

Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen offered a full-throated defense of the administration's immigration enforcement policies that lead to separation of families on the border.
(MORE: Uproar grows as administration digs in on child separation policy) (MORE: Audio recording emerges of 'orchestra' of crying children in migrant detention center)

In a statement, the Metro DC Democratic Socialists of America said members of the administration "will never be allowed to eat and drink in public again."

"We will not stand by and let Secretary Nielsen dine in peace, while she is directing her employees to tear little girls away from their mothers and crying boys away from their fathers at our border," said Margaret McLaughlin, a member of the MDCDSA Steering Committee, said in the statement. "Secretary Nielsen and everyone else who has carried out these brutal and cold-blooded orders to rip apart families should never be allowed to eat and drink in public again."

The video shot by the MDCDSA had garnered over 380,000 views by midnight.

Trump appeared to send a tweet of support to Nielsen at about 9 p.m., though the heckling incident was not specifically mentioned.

DHS spokesperson Tyler Houlton released a statement on Twitter saying, "While having a work dinner tonight, the Secretary and her staff heard from a small group of protestors who share her concern with our current immigration laws that have created a crisis on our southern border."

ABC News' Sofia Grimsgard contributed to this report.