At 24, Billie Eilish has spent most of her career being honored for her sustainability efforts and positioned as a voice for her generation. While accepting the MLK Jr. Beloved Community Award for Environmental Justice presented by the King Center on Saturday, Jan. 17, the musician flipped the spotlight on the people and organizations that are perpetuating the very conditions she is constantly standing against — namely, Donald Trump and the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency that his administration has militarized.
“It’s very strange to be celebrated for working towards environmental justice at a time where it feels less achievable than ever given the state of our country and the world right now,” Eilish said in the speech she prepared ahead of the ceremony in Atlanta. “We’re seeing our neighbors being kidnapped, peaceful protesters being assaulted and murdered, our civil rights being stripped, resources to fight the climate crisis being cut for fossil fuels and animal agriculture destroying our planet, and people’s access to food and healthcare becoming a privilege for the wealthy instead of a new basic human right for all Americans.”
The last time Eilish was presented with a high honor, at the WSJ Innovator Awards in October, she similarly used her speech to sound off on greater issues plaguing everyday people. “People need empathy and help more than, kind of, ever, especially in our country. I’d say if you have money, it would be great to use it for good things and maybe give it to some people that need it,” she said at the time. “If you’re a billionaire, why are you a billionaire? No hate, but yeah, give your money away.” It was revealed that day that $11.5 million from her tour will be donated across multiple organizations.
Following the killing of 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good by an ICE agent earlier this month, Eilish published several Instagram Stories condemning the agency. “ICE IS A FEDERALLY FUNDED AND SUPPORTED TERRORIST GROUP UNDER THE DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY THAT HAS DONE NOTHING TO MAKE OUR STREETS SAFER,” one of the reposted images read. A second post featured the names of the 32 people who died in ICE custody over the course of 2025. It was one of the deadliest years in ICE’s 22-year history.
“It is very clear that protecting our planet and our communities is not a priority for this administration. And it’s really hard to celebrate that when we no longer feel safe in our own homes or in our streets,” Eilish said while receiving the MLK Jr. Beloved Community Award, adding, “I have this platform and I think it’s my responsibility to use it, so I feel like I’m just doing what anyone in my position should be doing.”
Young people are continuously celebrated for taking action against problems they never should have encountered in the first place. It happened with Amariyanna Copeny, who raised awareness for the Flint water crisis when she was 8 years old. Greta Thunberg led the charge on school climate strikes at 15. In 2018, students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School responded to the deadly shooting at their school with the March for Our Lives demonstration.
The weight of responsibility is often shifted onto the shoulders of the youth, rather than those influencing policy, hoarding wealth, and abusing power. “I have never had an interest in being a role model, ever,” Eilish told Rolling Stone in 2024. “If you’re going to think I’m a role model, think I’m a role model in terms of trying to save the environment, and being more conscious of the way that you live, and your carbon footprint, and your contribution to animal agriculture.”
At the beginning of her speech, Eilish admitted that she doesn’t “feel deserving” of the award, but closed out on a hopeful note. “I am so inspired by all the stories and the other honorees tonight and everyone in this room, and I’m grateful to everyone and for the huge community of people who are taking action centered on Dr. King’s message,” she said. “I just want to thank my mom, both my parents, for raising me the way they did. I wouldn’t be doing any of this without you.”

