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L.A. Protests Intensify as Police Report ‘Mass Arrests' After Mayor Issued Downtown Curfew, While Trump Escalates Newsom Feud

L.A. Protests Intensify as Police Report ‘Mass Arrests' After Mayor Issued Downtown Curfew, While Trump Escalates Newsom Feud

Protests in Los Angeles continue to escalate as the city's police department have announced mass arrests overnight.
'Multiple groups continue to congregate on 1st St between Spring and Alameda. Those groups are being addressed and mass arrests are being initiated. Curfew is in effect,' read a post on the LAPD's social media, sent at 9:09p.m local time on Tuesday night.
A follow-up post said that 'curfew is in effect until 6 a.m.' and urged businesses and residents who have been impacted by the vandalism to submit an official report.
The curfew—starting at 8 p.m. local time—was put in place in the Downtown area of L.A. on Tuesday by the city's Mayor Karen Bass, who declared a local emergency.
'Applies to everyone—limited exceptions, including for emergency and medical personnel, residents, workers & credentialed media,' Bass said.
Speaking at a press conference, the Mayor explained that on Monday night: 'There were 23 businesses that were looted. If you drive through downtown L.A., the graffiti is everywhere and has caused significant damages... Law enforcement will arrest individuals who break the curfew and you will be prosecuted.'
Protests started in Los Angeles on Friday, as locals demonstrated against President Donald Trump's immigration policies, his Administration's push to ramp up deportations, and raids conducted by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
The protests turned violent, with reports of vandalism and looting.
TIME has looked at the data on deportation figures since President Donald Trump took office in January, and found that the number of people held in detention centres has risen by 25%. Whilst the number of arrests made by Customs and Border Protection has fallen, due to less people coming to the border, arrests by ICE officers have sharply risen. The Department of Homeland Security provided figures to TIME that more than 207,000 people have been deported since the start of Trump's second term.
Over the weekend, Trump deployed the National Guard in response to the protests, he did so without a request being made by California Gov. Gavin Newsom. In fact, Newsom and Bass have both been vocal in their disapproval over Trump's decision to bypass them and call in the National Guard. Trump has since ordered marines to quell the protests, also.
Read More: Trump Sparks Backlash as National Guard Arrives in L.A. on His Orders to Quell Immigration Protests: 'Purposefully Inflammatory'
On Sunday morning, as National Guard troops started arriving in L.A., Newsom said: 'Trump is sending 2,000 National Guard troops into L.A. County—not to meet an unmet need, but to manufacture a crisis. He's hoping for chaos so he can justify more crackdowns, more fear, more control.' Newsom urged Californians to 'never use violence' and 'stay peaceful.'
Newsom has since called the added deployment of the marines"a blatant abuse of power," maintaining that Pete Hegseth, the Secretary of Defense, is "illegally deploying them onto American streets so Trump can have a talking point at his parade this weekend."
A federal judge is due to hold a hearing on Thursday over California's request to block the Trump Administration from using troops in Los Angeles. The hearing comes after an emergency motion for a temporary restraining order filed Tuesday by Newsom was denied.
Newsom addressed Californians, and Americans as a whole, in an impassioned speech on Tuesday night.
'What's happening right now is very different than anything we've seen before… This isn't just about protests here in Los Angeles. When Donald Trump sought blanket authority to commandeer the National Guard, he made that order apply to every state in this nation,' Newsom said.
The Governor also maintained that Trump's deployment of the National Guard and the subsequent introduction of marines was illegal. 'California may be first, but it clearly will not end here. Other states are next. Democracy is next.,' he warned.
On Wednesday morning, Trump continued his very public war of words with California's Democrat Governor.
'The INCOMPETENT Governor of California was unable to provide protection in a timely manner when our Ice Officers, GREAT Patriots they are, were attacked by an out of control mob of agitators, troublemakers, and/or insurrectionists,' Trump said via a post on TruthSocial.
Speaking to U.S. Army personnel during an address at Fort Bragg in North Carolina on Tuesday, Trump doubled down on his decision to bypass Newsom and deploy troops to California.
"Generations of Army heroes did not shed their blood on distant shores only to watch our country be destroyed by invasion and third-world lawlessness,' he said. "What you're witnessing in California is a full-blown assault on peace, on public order and on national sovereignty, carried out by rioters bearing foreign flags.'
Meanwhile, the protests have now surpassed L.A. and have spread to other U.S. cities. Hundreds protested outside ICE headquarters in New York on Tuesday.
Elsewhere, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, has responded to the unrest in his state by deploying the National Guard.
'Texas National Guard will be deployed to locations across the state to ensure peace and order. Peaceful protest is legal. Harming a person or property is illegal and will lead to arrest,' Abbott said via social media. 'Texas Guard will use every tool and strategy to help law enforcement maintain order.'

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Democratic governors slam Trump's military deployment in California as ‘flagrant abuse of power'
Democratic governors slam Trump's military deployment in California as ‘flagrant abuse of power'

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  • CNN

Democratic governors slam Trump's military deployment in California as ‘flagrant abuse of power'

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Maxwell Frost asked each of the governors how they would handle potential arrests by the federal government, as he decried Trump having endorsed the idea of arresting California Gov. Gavin Newsom. 'If Tom Homan comes to Albany to arrest me, I'll say go for it. You can't intimidate a governor,' Hochul said, referring to the White House border czar. 'We're here on the frontlines every day, fighting to defend our rights, our values, and the public safety of our residents. And so, anything threatening our responsibility is an assault on our democracy, nothing short of that.' 'If Tom Homan were to come to try to arrest us, me, rather, I could say first of all that he can try,' Pritzker said. 'I can also tell you that I will stand in the way of Tom Homan going after people who don't deserve to be frightened in their communities, who don't deserve to be threatened, terrorized – I would rather that he came and arrested me than do that to the people of my state.' 'I didn't realize how much animosity there is here – we have a responsibility to the American public to work together. And I think threatening arrests on elected officials, congressman, it doesn't help any of us,' said Walz. 'And Gov. Pritzker is right – our citizens are scared and angry and it's not necessary. We can fix this with a bipartisan border bill, help us out.'

Trump signs measure blocking California's ban on new sales of gas-powered cars

timean hour ago

Trump signs measure blocking California's ban on new sales of gas-powered cars

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It comes as the Republican president is mired in a clash with California's Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom, over Trump's move to deploy troops to Los Angeles in response to immigration protests. It's the latest in an ongoing battle between the Trump administration and heavily Democratic California over issues including tariffs, the rights of LGBTQ+ youth and funding for electric vehicle chargers. The state is already involved in more than two-dozen lawsuits challenging Trump administration actions, and the state's Democratic Attorney General Rob Bonta announced the latest one at a news conference in California. Ten other states, all with Democratic attorneys general, joined the lawsuit filed Thursday. 'The federal government's actions are not only unlawful; they're irrational and wildly partisan,' Bonta said. 'They come at the direct expense of the health and the well-being of our people.' The three resolutions Trump signed will block California's rule phasing out gas-powered cars and end the sale of new ones by 2035. They will also kill rules that phase out the sale of medium- and heavy-duty diesel vehicles and cut tailpipe emissions from trucks. In his remarks at the White House, Trump expressed doubts about the performance and reliability of electric vehicles, though he had some notably positive comments about the company owned by Elon Musk, despite their fractured relationship. 'I like Tesla,' Trump said. In remarks that often meandered away from the subject at hand, Trump used the East Room ceremony to also muse on windmills, which he claimed 'are killing our country,' the prospect of getting electrocuted by an electric-powered boat if it sank and whether he'd risk a shark attack by jumping as the boat went down. 'I'll take electrocution every single day," the president said. 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Self-Proclaimed 'Best Friend' Of Barron Trump Brags About Calling ICE On Popular TikToker
Self-Proclaimed 'Best Friend' Of Barron Trump Brags About Calling ICE On Popular TikToker

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Self-Proclaimed 'Best Friend' Of Barron Trump Brags About Calling ICE On Popular TikToker

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