logo
Trump unleashes troops on cities already making progress on crime

Trump unleashes troops on cities already making progress on crime

The Hill3 hours ago
I was a mayor for 10 years. All mayors deal with crime, and we have learned a lot about what works to make cities safer for everyone.
That's why so many cities, including Washington, D.C., are safer today than they were 10, 20, or 30 years ago. And that's why we know President Trump's send-in-the-troops stunt in Washington, D.C., is not really about public safety.
People sometimes argue about whether Trump's actions are actually dangerous or merely efforts to distract people from news he wants to minimize. The truth is that all too frequently they are both.
I believe Trump taking control of D.C.'s police department and calling out the National Guard, based on false claims about crime, is both an attempt to distract voters from bad news about the extraordinary harm he is unleashing on the American people and an effort to further test the limits of his own power.
Let's not forget how much of Trump's second-term agenda — including the idea of undermining home rule for the citizens of Washington, D.C. and the deployment of troops against Americans — was envisioned and laid out in advance by the right-wing architects of Project 2025.
Trump's ambitions to rule like the dictatorial strongmen he admires in other countries made him the perfect vehicle for a movement that wants to reverse a century of progress and legal protections regardless of how many workers, consumers, families and communities are harmed.
And they're willing to use the military to quash inevitable protests.
'It's pretty clear that the president wants his own domestic police force, and step by step he's trying to create it,' Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.) observed. Smith called Trump's maneuver 'a huge step toward an autocratic government.'
Washington's unique status as a federal district — not a state or part of any state — makes it especially vulnerable to the abuse of presidential power. But no city is safe.
Trump made it clear in Los Angeles that he will deploy National Guard troops over the objections of state and local officials. He has explicitly threatened to expand his tactics in D.C. to other cities where he has far less constitutional legitimacy to intervene.
And just to clarify how much contempt the MAGA movement has for urban voters, Kevin Roberts, president of the Heritage Foundation and primary sponsor of Project 2025, recently called on right-wing state legislators to gut democracy in their own capitals and turn them into 'state municipal districts.'
Trump and the movement behind him, the MAGA activists and the institutional muscle represented by the Heritage Foundation and the more than 100 organizations endorsing Project 2025, seem eager to dismantle the checks and balances that are meant to keep a corrupt and abusive president in line. And that is proving to be extremely dangerous.
The deployment of American troops against American citizens is illegal except in extraordinary emergencies. It can't be done to intimidate dissenters. It can't be done to make Trump feel good. It can't be done to shift public attention from news that is unflattering to the president.
To be sure, Trump would like to distract us from scrutiny of his relationship with the late sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein — and the sweetheart treatment his regime is now giving Epstein's accomplice and convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell.
The president would like to distract us from bad economic news on jobs and the price of groceries.
And, certainly, the president would rather that we not pay much attention to the astonishing levels of shady dealing that have made Trump and his family billions of dollars richer.
Trump abusing his power to shift the narrative is an aspect of his authoritarian rule. It's not going to make the residents of D.C. or any other city safer.
Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott, whose city has been another Trump target, noted in a CNN interview that his city has had the fewest homicides in 50 years this year.
That kind of progress takes a thoughtful, collective effort — not just 'get tough' rhetoric and more militarized cops. It takes smart strategic investments in communities and stronger relationships between communities and police.
'Mayors across the country have brought together law enforcement, the legal community, the actual community through community violence intervention work, to reduce violence across this country in cities to lows that we have not seen in decades,' Scott told viewers.
'The president could learn a lot from us instead of throwing things at us,' he added.
Listening and learning is not exactly the president's strong suit. Throwing things — smears, tantrums, distractions — is much more his style.
That's bad for America and all Americans, not just those of us who live in the cities Trump likes to vilify.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Zelensky, Europeans highlight ‘future security architecture' ahead of Trump meeting
Zelensky, Europeans highlight ‘future security architecture' ahead of Trump meeting

The Hill

time4 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Zelensky, Europeans highlight ‘future security architecture' ahead of Trump meeting

Ukraine's president and a number of European leaders on Monday said the U.S. must be a partner in creating the future security architecture for Ukraine and the entire European continent. The statement came after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky huddled with European leaders at the Ukrainian embassy in Georgetown before heading to the White House to meet with President Trump. While Trump has ruled out bringing Ukraine into NATO, he has raised some sort of security guarantees for the country as part of any peace deal with Russia. 'The leaders welcomed the readiness of the United States to participate in guaranteeing security for Ukraine. One of the key issues in the negotiations with President Trump will be the joint participation of the United States and Europe in creating the future security architecture for Ukraine and, consequently, for the entire European continent,' the statement read. The signatories to the statement included President of Finland Alexander Stubb, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Keir Starmer, President of the Council of Ministers of Italy Giorgia Meloni, President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen, and NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte.

Mississippi joining 3 other GOP-led states sending National Guard troops to DC
Mississippi joining 3 other GOP-led states sending National Guard troops to DC

The Hill

time4 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Mississippi joining 3 other GOP-led states sending National Guard troops to DC

Mississippi on Monday became the fourth Republican-led state to announce plans to send National Guard troops to Washington, D.C. to bolster President Trump's crackdown on crime in the nation's capital. 'I've approved the deployment of approximately 200 Mississippi National Guard Soldiers to Washington, D.C., to support President Trump's effort to return law and order to our nation's capital,' Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves (R) said in a post on the social platform X. 'Crime is out of control there, and it's clear something must be done to combat it,' he continued. 'Americans deserve a safe capital city that we can all be proud of. I know the brave men and women of our National Guard will do an excellent job enhancing public safety and supporting law enforcement.' West Virginia Gov. Patrick Morrisey (R), South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster (R) and Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) all announced over the weekend that they would send hundreds of soldiers from their states to nearly double the 800 D.C. National Guard members already mobilized. All three GOP governors said in their advisories that they were acting on requests from the Trump administration. The president announced a massive crime-fighting effort in Washington last week, with a federal takeover of the Metropolitan Police Department and infusion of federal agents and National Guard troops. 'Until 4 days ago, Washington, D.C., was the most unsafe 'city' in the United States, and perhaps the World,' Trump wrote in an update on Truth Social early Monday. 'Now, in just a short period of time, it is perhaps the safest, and getting better every single hour!' Attorney General Pam Bondi wrote on X on Monday morning that federal authorities made 137 arrests over the weekend, bringing the total arrests since the initiative began to more than 400. 'We are not slowing down,' she wrote. 'We are committed to making DC safe again!' Trump has set his sights on tackling crime in the nation's capital, even as local officials have pushed back on characterizations of violent surges. According to the District's statistics, which Trump has deemed 'fake,' violent crime is down about 26 percent compared to this point last year.

Democratic-led states sue Trump admin over restrictions on funding for victims of crimes
Democratic-led states sue Trump admin over restrictions on funding for victims of crimes

USA Today

time4 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Democratic-led states sue Trump admin over restrictions on funding for victims of crimes

Democratic attorneys general said states are being strong-armed into supporting Trump's immigration policies. Democratic attorneys general are suing the Trump administration over its attempt to condition federal funding for the victims of crimes on states' cooperation with federal immigration enforcement. In a suit filed on Aug. 18 in Rhode lsland, the attorneys general called the move a brazen attempt by the Justice Department to 'strong-arm' states into supporting President Donald Trump's immigration policies. 'We won't be bullied or manipulated by the Trump administration,' California Attorney General Rob Bonta told reporters. The Trump administration has threatened to sue and withhold federal funds from more than 20 "sanctuary" states, cities and counties, because of their lack of cooperation with federal immigration enforcement. "Sanctuary policies impede law enforcement and put American citizens at risk by design," Attorney General Pam Bondi said in an Aug. 5 statement. There's no specific legal definition of a sanctuary city, state or other jurisdiction, but Bondi's office criticized policies like failing to collaborate with Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, providing government benefits to undocumented immigrants or refusing to share immigration information about jail detainees. See Trump's target list Is your community an immigrant sanctuary? The states argue the administration can't threaten to withhold the more than $1 billion in federal grants from a program created in 1984 to bolster support for crime victims. The grants fund compensation programs to cover such costs as medical bills, funeral costs and lost wages for survivors. The federal funding also pays for counseling, emergency shelter, crisis hotlines and legal support. New Jersey Attorney General Matt Platkin said the administration is using the victims of gun violence, domestic violence, sexual assault survivors and others as political pawns. The attorneys general are asking a judge to block the administration from imposing new estrictions on the funding, arguing the money has already been approved by Congress.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store