
President Trump targets Washington DC's 'old, tired, exhausted' grass amid takeover
He wants to rip out and replace the grass at DC parks.
"We're going to be redoing the parks, redoing the grass," Trump said on Aug. 13 as he named the latest slate of Kennedy Center honorees from Washington's John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. "You know, grass has a lifetime, like people have a lifetime. And the lifetime of this grass is long. It's been gone, when you look at the parks."
Trump's push for a grass makeover comes as he's vowed not only to tackle crime in the nation's capital but to also make D.C. "so beautiful again." Echoing the language of his long career in real estate, Trump has talked about D.C. like he might a fixer-upper property. He wants graffiti painted over, litter picked up and ‒ yes ‒ grass replaced at parks.
"The grass is old, tired, exhausted," Trump said. "We're going to be redoing the grass with the finest grasses. I know a lot about grass because I own a lot of golf courses. And if you don't have good grass, you're not in business very long."
More: Seeing 'oceanfront property' in Ukraine, Trump's real estate history shapes his presidency
Trump did not identify the parks he has in mind for grass replacement. Several of D.C.'s most recognizable parks, including the National Mall, are federal parks managed by the National Park Service. Others are local parks managed by DC's Department of Parks and Recreation.
Washington DC is in the middle of a dry spell, making grass around town browner and barer than usual. For the past five years, Washington DC has been named the nation's best big-city park system by the nonprofit Trust for Public Land.
More: President Trump says other US cities could be next as he deploys National Guard to DC
Trump to ask Congress to extend police takeover beyond 30 days
Trump on Aug. 11 took control of Washington DC's Metropolitan Police Department by declaring a "crime emergency" under the Home Rule Act of 1973, even as the city's violent crime has dropped by 26% this year. He also deployed 800 National Guard troops to DC, declaring he wants to rescue it from "crime, bloodshed, bedlam, squalor and worse."
Under the Home Rule Act, however, Trump's federal takeover of the police department must end within 30 days unless he gets approval from Congress.
Trump said he plans to submit crime-related legislation to Congress "very quickly" that will include extending the federalized police force in D.C. beyond 30 days. He said he expects unanimous Republican support for the measure.
"We're going to be asking for extensions on that ‒ long-term extensions ‒ because you can't have (just) 30 days," he said.
Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison.
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The Hill
4 minutes ago
- The Hill
Meeting Putin in Alaska, Trump risks a catastrophic defeat
History is chasing President Trump and, come tomorrow, one way or the other, it will find him in Alaska. Many observers warn that his upcoming meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin could be as globally catastrophic as British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain's was with Nazi Chancellor Adolf Hitler at Munich in 1938. Or it could be worse. Team Trump has the benefit of history as a guide. The next 50 to 100 years of U.S.-Russia relations will likely be determined by how well or how badly Trump knows that history. Chamberlain's failure at appeasing Hitler is the obvious lesson. But the other lesson, considerably more nuanced, was his unforgiveable negligence in not giving Czechoslovakia or Poland a seat at the negotiating table. Trump is now repeating this same mistake by excluding Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. The White House's excuse is that Putin requested the meeting. By weakly omitting Zelensky, Trump is recklessly making his own mistake far greater than Chamberlain's original sin at Munich. Ukraine today, unlike Poland and Czechoslovakia in 1938, has established itself as a bulwark against future Russian aggression in Eastern Europe. If Putin wins, then not only will Ukraine be lost, but Poland, Moldova, Finland and the Baltic States — especially the strategic Suwalki Gap — will be, to put it in military terms, perilously at risk. Team Trump would be wise to view Putin's machinations as akin to a dystopian invasion of Alaska. Ditto the entire West. Putin's Foreign Ministry made it clear Wednesday that he is not backing down from his maximalist demands, which would end Ukrainian independence. With this meeting, he is trying once again to win from Team Trump what he has not been able to win in three-and-a-half years of war. Russian evil, as embodied by Putin's ongoing genocide against Ukraine, war crimes and crimes against humanity, will have won out over the notion of core American values of freedom and liberty. In MacBeth-like terms, this dystopia would end up where American fair is foul and Russian foul is fair. If Putin bests Trump in Alaska, it will also result a decisive economic victory by Putin over Trump. The Donbas is estimated to have more than 50 percent of Ukraine's rare earth minerals, with a potential economic value of $5.75 trillion. Those funds are needed for Ukraine to repay the U.S. and to rebuild after the war. Recent Kremlin gains, including an ongoing Russian ground breakout in Donetsk earlier this week, are already putting more and more of those Ukrainian rare earth deposits on Putin's side of the battle lines. Western Europe is highly alarmed. 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On Tuesday, by disinviting Zelensky, the White House gave Putin an easy win. Earlier on Monday, Trump slammed Zelensky for insisting that Ukraine would not swap any territory with Russia to end the war. He also heavily criticized Zelensky for claiming he could not do so even if he wanted, given that Ukraine's constitution requires Ukraine's parliament to vote on it. Vice President JD Vance had gone even further. He asserted on Fox News Sunday morning that the U.S. is done directly funding the war in Ukraine. As if an exclamation mark, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth issued an order that allows the return of U.S. weapons and ammunition stationed in Europe that had been intended for Ukraine's use. In stark contrast, Putin's team is on the same page with their their BRICS trading partners and their 'Axis of Evil' allies, China, Iran and North Korea. Team Trump is dividing and conquering itself, while Team Putin is ideologically invading the 49th state. 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Axios
4 minutes ago
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Israeli spy chief visits Doha for Gaza talks
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Axios
4 minutes ago
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What to know about the Trump-Putin summit and their previous encounters
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