logo
DC homeless camps cleared out in Trump takeover as Bondi replaces police commissioner with DEA chief

DC homeless camps cleared out in Trump takeover as Bondi replaces police commissioner with DEA chief

Yahoo13 hours ago
Homeless camps in Washington, D.C., have been cleared in President Donald Trump's crime-fighting takeover as Attorney General Pam Bondi replaced the city's police commissioner with the Drug Enforcement Administration chief.
Trump announced Monday he was placing the D.C. police department under direct federal control and deploying the National Guard to 'rescue our nation's capital from crime, bloodshed, bedlam, and squalor, and worse,' despite violent crime declining in recent years.
Mayor Muriel Bowser has criticized the federal takeover, calling the move 'unsettling and unprecedented,' and even 'authoritarian.'
Troops started hitting the streets of Washington Tuesday evening, and by Thursday, all 800 soldiers that had been deployed were mobilized, The New York Times reported, citing the Pentagon.
Also on Thursday, Bondi named DEA head Terry Cole as D.C.'s 'emergency police commissioner.' With Cole in this role, local police must get his approval before issuing any orders.
Some of D.C.'s homeless population started to pack up their belongings Thursday as they braced for encampment sweeps.
An earth mover was seen scooping away the remains of encampments near the Institute of Peace building, the Associated Press reported.
Members of the city's Health and Human Services department began clearing an encampment near the Kennedy Center Thursday morning, perThe Washington Post.
'I'd like to invite the president to spend some time here in a tent with us,' William Wilson, 66, told the publication, adding, 'We're nice people.'
On Sunday, Trump wrote on Truth Social, "The Homeless have to move out, IMMEDIATELY.'
"We will give you places to stay, but FAR from the Capital. The Criminals, you don't have to move out. We're going to put you in jail where you belong,' he said.
Roughly 70 homeless encampments in D.C. have been removed since March, according to White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt.
Homelessness has decreased by 9 percent since 2024, according to a May press release from Bowser.
While outreach workers have helped the homeless population pack up their belongings, issues are being raised about what happens next for these people.
Amber Harding, executive director of the Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless, told The Washington Post, 'Shelters have a two-bag maximum, so people might not want to go to a shelter if they don't want to throw away their stuff that can't fit into two bags.'
Harding also pointed to the location of the government shelters as another issue, since they are not downtown.
'That means people will have to be transported there, which means moving away from where they are currently staying, from the people they know and the places where they are currently getting services,' she said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump Is Testing D.C.'s Home Rule. What Is It?
Trump Is Testing D.C.'s Home Rule. What Is It?

New York Times

timea few seconds ago

  • New York Times

Trump Is Testing D.C.'s Home Rule. What Is It?

President Trump's rapidly escalating push to exert control over law enforcement in Washington, D.C., has posed one of the biggest threats to the city's self-governance since it was granted limited home rule by Congress in 1973. The fight, which has now moved to the courts, could affect not just who gives orders to the city's police officers in the coming days, but what becomes of the District's tenuous autonomy. What is home rule? The District of Columbia Home Rule Act of 1973 gave residents of the capital a limited form of self-governance for the first time since the 1800s. Before it, Congress and commissioners appointed by the president governed the city. And District residents — who had no representation in Congress — basically had no local elections to vote in, either. Home rule gave D.C. residents the power to elect a mayor, a District of Columbia Council and local neighborhood commissioners. But it also imposed extensive congressional oversight over how those officials govern the city, including the laws and budgets they adopt. As a result, the federal government hovers over how local officials govern just about every aspect of life in the city. The arrangement — unique to any city in America and originating in the Constitution's provision for a federal 'District' — has shifted some over time. For a period starting in the mid-1990s, a financial control board established by Congress managed the city's finances. And the federal government has taken back control of some functions the city struggled to fund (given the limitations Congress itself put on revenue the city could raise). But the basic contours of government in D.C. have been set for half a century by home rule — or 'limited home rule,' as locals more often describe it. Who controls the police department under home rule? The Metropolitan Police Department is controlled by Mayor Muriel Bowser of the District of Columbia, a Democrat, who appoints its police chief. The agency primarily functions as other municipal police departments do, although it also regularly supports the federal government. When the president travels around town in his motorcade, M.P.D. manages traffic. When large protests or events like inaugurations happen, M.P.D. officers help secure them (they also responded to the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol). Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

What Drives Trump's DC Takeover
What Drives Trump's DC Takeover

Bloomberg

timea few seconds ago

  • Bloomberg

What Drives Trump's DC Takeover

When President Donald Trump declared a federal takeover of Washington, DC's law enforcement this week, he framed it as an emergency order to crack down on crime and disorder. But threaded through his announcement was a broader vision for the aesthetic transformation of the US capital: He promised to 'clean up' the city by removing homeless encampments and graffiti. And he talked about grandiose projects like his plan to build a new golden ballroom in the White House. Trump's twin obsessions with crime and ornament hark back to a Gilded Age movement known as City Beautiful: In the 1890s, urban reformers sought to reshape major US city centers, often razing poor and Black communities to make way for gleaming gardens and plazas. In the South, urban beautification came hand-in-hand with building memorials to the Confederacy. More than a century later, Trump is using DC's unique relationship with the federal government to revive that playbook. Read more from Kriston Capps today on CityLab: Trump's Politics of Urban Disgust

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