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5 takeaways from the Alex Padilla furor

5 takeaways from the Alex Padilla furor

Yahoo17 hours ago

Chaotic scenes in which Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) was pressed to the ground and handcuffed by federal agents set the political world aflame on Thursday.
Padilla had come to a news conference being held by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, raising his voice to ask questions. Agents, reportedly including at least one member of Noem's official security detail, swarmed Padilla, moving him to a corridor before pressing him to the ground and placing the handcuffs on him.
The stunning moment played out against the political backdrop of disorder in California. President Trump's administration is seeking to crack down even harder on immigrants without legal status, and pro-immigrant activists are trying to block Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents from detaining people.
Anti-ICE demonstrators have hurled debris at police and set cars ablaze. The strife — and the political debate — intensified after Trump ordered the deployment of the National Guard and the Marines. He did so in contravention of the wishes of California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass (D).
Here are the main takeaways from the Padilla episode.
The sheer potency of the Padilla video is more powerful than anything else.
The most widely circulated clip, which lasts less than a minute, begins with Padilla standing relatively close to where Noem is speaking, but not within arm's reach or making any sudden move toward her. Agents begin to push him further away.
As they continue physically pressing in on him, the senator says, 'I am Sen. Alex Padilla, I have questions for the secretary.'
Padilla begins to make remarks that he never gets to finish related to 'violent criminals,' and he is pushed into an adjacent corridor, briefly out of view of the camera. A voice — presumably Padilla's — says 'hands off.'
Moments later, with three agents surrounding him, he is told to get 'on the ground' and to put his hands behind his back. At least two of the agents have their hands on Padilla holding him to the ground at this point, and cuffs are placed on him.
A voice from an unidentified man then tells the person filming the events on their cellphone that no recording is allowed.
The brief clip ends.
But the shocking nature of seeing a sitting senator treated in such a way resonated immediately, taking over cable TV networks and social media and sparking a political firestorm.
Democrats responded with fury to the treatment of Padilla, casting it as horrifying in itself — and as emblematic of the Trump administration's broader approach.
Former Vice President Kamala Harris wrote on social media that the way Padilla was treated was a 'shameful and stunning abuse of power.'
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said he was 'sickened to my stomach' by what he had seen.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) called it 'a horrifying moment in our nation's history.'
Democrats, and millions of liberal Americans, were already outraged about Trump's deployment of the National Guard and the Marines, which they argue was an unnecessary and purposefully inflammatory move.
Several media outlets reported that Padilla's attempt to question Noem took place after she had claimed federal agents were going 'to liberate this city' from its 'socialist' leaders.
Soon after the incident on Thursday, Newsom called the treatment of Padilla 'outrageous, dictatorial and shameful,' and Bass said it was 'absolutely abhorrent.'
But liberals also see the immigration question as part of a bigger picture, in which Trump has sought to exert his muscle against universities, the media, judges and law firms, as well as his political foes.
To them, he is a president exceptional in all the wrong ways — in his intolerance of dissent, and his willingness to use the levers of government power to crush it.
The images of Padilla being handcuffed crystallizes their case.
The White House has vigorously defended the agents' treatment of Padilla. They are saying the senator is to blame.
White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said in a statement, 'Padilla stormed a press conference, without wearing his Senate pin or previously identifying himself to security, yelled, and lunged toward Secretary Noem.'
The video of the incident does not appear to show Padilla wearing the pin that identifies senators, but it also does not include images of him lunging at Noem. Moreover, he clearly does inform the agents who swarm him that he is a senator. The White House's argument is that he did not do so early enough in the encounter.
Jackson added, 'Padilla didn't want answers; he wanted attention.'
The official X account of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) also contended that Padilla had 'interrupted a live press conference without identifying himself' and had 'lunged' at Noem.
The DHS also alleged that Padilla was 'told repeatedly to back away and did not comply with officers' repeated commands.'
Noem herself told Fox News soon after, 'He was never arrested. … Nobody knew who he was when he came into the room creating a scene. He was removed from the room. Yes, they started to put handcuffs on him — when he finally identified himself and then that was stopped.'
Padilla says it's false to suggest nobody knew who he was, even before the melee erupted, because a member of the National Guard and an FBI agent escorted him into Noem's press conference from elsewhere in the building in the first place.
Even so, members of the Trump administration plainly believe that adopting the president's 'never back down' approach will pay political dividends.
The Padilla episode plainly helps Democrats make their case that the Trump administration is prone to repressive tactics.
But the image of the senator on the ground also has to compete, in a political sense, with some of the equally compelling images of disorder in Los Angeles.
Images of anti-ICE protesters using Molotov cocktails, carrying Mexican flags and setting fire to vehicles have been potent, especially with audiences that lean to the right.
The latter images have been used to make the case that Democrats are soft on immigration — and on crime, especially if it relates to protests for causes they believe in.
Those images, in turn, feed the belief that Trump is justified in mobilizing troops to restore order.
Immigration was Trump's strongest issue in the general election campaign against Harris last year. He argued that former President Biden had been far too lax on the issue, in effect facilitating a massive influx at the southern border.
Voters have mostly approved of Trump's efforts on border security while in office, as unauthorized crossings have fallen precipitously. But his poll ratings on immigration writ large are much more mixed.
It's plausible that the apparent discrepancy stems from a public disquiet with some of the tactics used by immigration agents, and with Trump's often fractious attitude toward the courts when they rule against him.
An Economist/YouGov poll this week highlighted the split. It found that 47 percent of surveyed Americans believe Trump's approach to immigration it too harsh, 40 percent believe it is about right, and 7 percent believe it is too soft.
The same poll found 87 percent of surveyed Americans supporting the deportation of migrants without legal status who have committed violent crimes — but 61 percent opposed to deportations of those who had not committed violent crimes.
In short, the politics of immigration is more nuanced and more changeable than hard-liners on either side make it appear.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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The Army is set to celebrate 250 years with a parade that coincides with Trump's birthday
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US military parade has global counterparts in democracies, monarchies and totalitarian regimes
US military parade has global counterparts in democracies, monarchies and totalitarian regimes

Yahoo

time40 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

US military parade has global counterparts in democracies, monarchies and totalitarian regimes

The military parade to mark the Army's 250th anniversary and its convergence with President Donald Trump's 79th birthday are combining to create a peacetime outlier in U.S. history. Yet it still reflects global traditions that serve a range of political and cultural purposes. Variations on the theme have surfaced among longtime NATO allies in Europe, one-party and authoritarian states and history's darkest regimes. France: Bastille Day and Trump's idée inspirée The oldest democratic ally of the U.S. holds a military parade each July 14 to commemorate one of the seminal moments of the French Revolution. It inspired — or at least stoked — Trump's idea for a Washington version. On July 14, 1789, French insurgents stormed the Bastille, which housed prisoners of Louis XVI's government. Revolutionaries commenced a Fête de la Fédération as a day of national unity and pride the following year, even with the First French Republic still more than two years from being established. The Bastille Day parade has rolled annually since 1880. Now, it proceeds down an iconic Parisian route, the Avenue des Champs-Élysées. It passes the Arc de Triomphe — a memorial with tributes to the French Revolution, Napoleonic Wars and World War I — and eventually in front of the French president, government ministers and invited foreign guests. Trump attended in 2017, early in his first presidency, as U.S. troops marched as guests. The spectacle left him openly envious. 'It was one of the greatest parades I've ever seen,' Trump told French President Emanuel Macron. 'It was military might, and I think a tremendous thing for France and for the spirit of France. We're going to have to try and top it.' The British set modern ceremonial standards In the United Kingdom, King Charles III serves as ceremonial (though not practical) head of U.K. armed forces. Unlike in France and the U.S., where elected presidents wear civilian dress even at military events, Charles dons elaborate dress uniforms — medals, sash, sword, sometimes even a bearskin hat and chin strap. He does it most famously at Trooping the Colour, a parade and troop inspection to mark the British monarch's official birthday, regardless of their actual birthdate. (The U.S. Army has said it has no specific plans to recognize Trump's birthday on Saturday.) In 2023, Charles' first full year as king, he rode on horseback to inspect 1,400 representatives of the most prestigious U.K. regiments. His mother, Queen Elizabeth II, used a carriage over the last three decades of her 70-year reign. The British trace Trooping the Colour back to King Charles II, who reigned from 1660-1685. It became an annual event under King George III, described in the American colonists' Declaration of Independence as a figure of 'absolute Despotism (and) Tyranny.' Authoritarians flaunt military assets Grandiose military pomp is common under modern authoritarians, especially those who have seized power via coups. It sometimes serves as a show of force meant to ward off would-be challengers — and to seek legitimacy and respect from other countries. Cuba's Fidel Castro, who wore military garb routinely, held parades to commemorate the revolution he led on Dec. 2, 1959. In 2017, then-President Raúl Castro refashioned the event into a Fidel tribute shortly after his brother's death. Venezuela's Hugo Chávez, known as 'Comandante Chávez,' presided over frequent parades until his 2013 death. His successor, Nicolás Maduro, has worn military dress at similar events. North Korean dictator Kim Jung Un, who famously bonded with Trump in a 2018 summit, used a 2023 military parade to show off his daughter and potential successor, along with pieces of his isolated country's nuclear arsenal. The event in Pyongyang's Kim Il Sung Square — named for Kim's grandfather — marked the North Korean Army's 75th birthday. Kim watched from a viewing stand as missiles other weaponry moved by and goose-stepping soldiers marched past him chanting, 'Defend with your life, Paektu Bloodline' — referring to the Kim family's biological ancestry. In China, Beijing's one-party government stages its National Day Parade every 10 years to project civic unity and military might. The most recent events, held in 2009 and 2019, involved trucks carrying nuclear missiles designed to evade U.S. defenses, as well as other weaponry. Legions of troops, along with those hard assets, streamed past President Xi Jinping and other leaders gathered in Tiananmen Square in 2019 as spectators waved Chinese flags and fighter jets flew above. Earlier this spring, Xi joined Russian President Vladimir Putin — another strongman leader Trump has occasionally praised — in Moscow's Red Square for the annual 'Victory Day' parade. The May 9 event commemorates the Soviet Union's role in defeating Nazi Germany in World War II — a global conflict in which China and the Soviet Union, despite not being democracies, joined the Allied Powers in fighting the Axis Powers led by Germany and Japan. A birthday parade for Hitler Large civic-military displays were, of course, a feature in Nazi Germany and fascist Italy before and during World War II. Chilling footage of such events lives on as a reminder of the dangers of authoritarian extremism. Among those frequent occasions: a parade capping Germany's multiday observance of Adolf Hitler's 50th birthday in 1939. (Some far-right extremists in Europe still mark the anniversary of Hitler's birth.) The four-hour march through Berlin on April 20, 1939, included more than 40,000 personnel across the Army, Navy, Luftwaffe (Air Force) and Schutzstaffel (commonly known as the 'SS.') Hundreds of thousands of spectators lined the streets. The Führer's invited guests numbered 20,000. On a street-level platform, Hitler was front and center. Alone. ___

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