Activists erected and tore down a Confederate-themed statue of Attorney General Jeff Sessions in downtown D.C. on Wednesday in protest of the Trump administration’s repeal of the DACA program.

“Jeff Sessions is a living monument to the Confederacy,” said Marisa Franco, director of Latino advocacy group Mijente, who announced the march in a release. “He and Donald Trump’s white supremacist agenda must be stopped.”

Sessions announced on Tuesday that the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program ended, closing off new applications immediately and rescinding protections for 800,000 DREAMers in six months. He called the Obama-era program an “open-ended circumvention of immigration laws” that “contributed to a surge of unaccompanied minors” and “denied jobs to hundreds of thousands of Americans.” Hours later, a crowd of hundreds of people gathered in front of the White House and marched past the Trump hotel to ICE headquarters.

At the rally on Wednesday, protesters marched in the rain to the Department of Justice with the statue of Sessions, dressed as a Confederate soldier. Its base had the inscription: “Jefferson Beauregard Sessions, living monument of white supremacy.”

Once they arrived at the federal building, they chanted “take down sessions!” and pulled the grey cardboard statue to the ground—it’s head broke off in the crash.

Former President Barack Obama enacted the program via executive order in 2012. After Session’s announcement, Obama said in a statement that “to target these young people is wrong—because they have done nothing wrong. It is self-defeating—because they want to start new businesses, staff our labs, serve in our military, and otherwise contribute to the country we love.”

The program recipients’ fates are now in the hands of Congress, which has failed to pass similar legislation for years and also has several other major legislative pushes in the months ahead.

Tania Unzueta, Mijente’s legal and policy director and a DACA recipient, said in the release that “we fought for and won relief then, we will fight and win again. Today, our community mourns the cruelty that has taken over government and we also rededicate ourselves to organizing to confront and overcome it.”

The Sessions stunt references a movement that’s happening across the country as localities wrestle with what to do with statues that honor Confederate generals.

Locally, the city of Rockville, Md. quietly removed a statue of a Confederate soldier from outside its courthouse after several years of debate. Baltimore and Ellicott City officials removed statutes following the deadly “Unite The Right” protest in Charlottesville. And leaders other cities across the country, including D.C., are advocating to have them removed.

Protesters preserved Sessions’ statue’s head with a plastic bag. Unzueta told The Washington Post it will remain in D.C. “It doesn’t have a scheduled agenda yet,” he said. “But I imagine there will be more protests.”