
Los Angeles responds with roaring backlash to Trump's dramatic escalation
Donald Trump's administration promised to crush opposition in Los Angeles.
Late on Saturday night, the US president deployed national guard soldiers in LA following protests against immigration raids in the city – a stunning escalation in the administration's promise of 'mass deportations'. His administration has promised to quell protests, and warned local leaders to brace for at least 30 days of ramped-up immigration enforcement.
But the overwhelming show of force may have awoken something else. The city is responding with a roaring backlash.
The moment Trump was sworn in for his second presidential term, he unleashed a barrage of draconian immigration restrictions. Ice agents began ambushing people inside their homes, in schools and churches. Children were being detained in what activists have called 'baby jails'. Asylum seekers were exiled to a brutal mega-prison in El Salvador.
There were protests across the US – but the resistance that marked Trump's first term seemed to have flagged. Institutions had begun folding to the president's threats. As the administration escalated immigration raids and stripped away immigrants' rights; politicians mounted muffled objections.
And then Trump came after Los Angeles.
Fueling the fury was the brutality with which federal agents had approached its targets, including a clothing manufacturer in Los Angeles's garment district, and Home Depot in the Westlake district and a warehouse in South Los Angeles. The arrests were carried out without judicial warrants, according to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) – advocates say that more than 200 people were taken.
Lawyers reported that Immigration and Customs Enforcement has been holding detained families in the basements of federal immigration facilities, separating children and mothers from their fathers. Agents have refused access to attorneys and family members, according to the Immigrant Defenders Law Center (ImmDef).
As masked immigration officers ripped workers away from their jobs, other agents in riot gear attacked protesters with tear gas and flash bang grenades, escalating a handful of isolated demonstrations into a clash that roiled the city and spurred several hundred to join the protest.
Among the protesters arrested was union leader David Huerta, president of SEIU-USWW and SEIU California. The images of a middle-aged man in a plaid button-down shirt who was shoved down to the ground have angered millions of union workers across the US, wrote LA Times columnist Anita Chabria. 'The battleground has been redrawn in ways we don't fully yet appreciate,' she wrote.
Trump has responded to the protests with escalating force, bypassing the governor to activate the state's national guard for the first time since the 1992 LA riots, when police officers were acquitted over the beating of Rodney King. Pete Hegseth, the defense secretart, suggested that in addition to the 2,000 guardsmen promised, the government would consider sending in the marines – a suggestion that California governor Gavin Newsom called 'deranged'.
JD Vance suggested that the administration was targeting this Democratic city in a Democratic state as part of a political lesson, referring to protestors as 'insurrectionists'.
The show of might is all part of a deliberate strategy to 'flood the zone', according to the White House border czar Tom Homan, who told Fox News recently that the administration would be zeroing in on 'sanctuary cities' that refuse to cooperate with immigration enforcers.
But communities don't like to see their friends and neighbors cuffed. 'These are workers, these are fathers, these are mothers,' said Angelica Salas, executive director for the advocacy group Chirla, said at a news conference on Friday. 'Our community is under attack and is being terrorized.'
US representative Maxine Waters, who also was denied entry to the federal immigration office in downtown LA, said the crowds should 'grow and grow and grow' until Trump reversed course on his deploying of soldiers.
Similar raids took place in Newark, Chicago, Nashville and other cities across the US. In San Diego last week, a neighbourhood mobilized as federal agents raided restaurants, yelling 'Shame! Shame!' at officers in military gear.
'The administration is testing Los Angeles to see if we break under pressure,' said Lindsay Toczylowski, president of ImmDef. 'But we won't back down.'

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The Herald Scotland
15 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
president donald trump deploys national guard california
"Presidents set precedents and this one is escalatory, incendiary, and could come back to haunt all Americans," Sen. Jack Reed, the top Democrat on the Armed Services Committee, said June 8. Trump's order gives 2,000 soldiers the authority to protect federal property like office buildings but no power to arrest civilians, according to a spokesperson for U.S. Northern Command, which is directing the operation. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth also has put an active-duty Marine unit on orders to prepare to deploy to California. The 300 members of the California National Guard who deployed Sunday to three sites in Los Angeles appeared to face little in the way of organized opposition, according to a Defense official who was not authorized to speak publicly. Their presence was a performative show of force, the official said, as their authority is clearly restricted. Most of the Guard soldiers are military police officers whose day jobs typically are in civilian law enforcement. They understand the need for restraint, the official said. If they see a protester vandalize federal property, a Social Security Administration office, for example, they can detain the suspect and turn them over to local police. Trump's order fell short of invoking the Insurrection Act, an 18th century law that gives the president authority to use the military to enforce federal law, suppress a rebellion or protect a group's civil rights if the state does not do so. It was last invoked in 1992 during by President George HW Bush at the request of California's governor in response to riots after police officers involved in the beating of Rodney King had been acquitted. Trump and Hegseth's unilateral action over Newsom's objection sets dangerous precedent, Reed said in a statement. "It is crucial that decisions of this magnitude are made with transparency, restraint, and respect for constitutional balance," Reed said. "The President and Defense Secretary should immediately stand down these troops and Congress should reject this dangerous overreaction."


The Herald Scotland
15 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
National Guard in LA amid immigration protests: live updates
U.S. Northern Command said approximately 300 soldiers were quickly deployed to three locations in the greater Los Angeles area to provide "safety and protection of federal property and personnel." The Los Angeles Police Department said its officers had been deployed to the protest area. "Everyone has the right to peacefully assemble and voice their opinions," LAPD said in a social media post. "However, vandalizing property and attempting to seriously injure officers, whether Federal or LAPD, is not peaceful." Why did Trump deploy the Guard? What to know about the situation in LA "These Radical Left protests, by instigators and often paid troublemakers, will NOT BE TOLERATED," Trump said in a social media post Sunday. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Trump signed a memo a day earlier deploying the guardsmen "to address the lawlessness that has been allowed to fester." "The Trump Administration has a zero tolerance policy for criminal behavior and violence, especially when that violence is aimed at law enforcement officers trying to do their jobs," she said in a statement. On Saturday, a large protest erupted in the city of Paramount in Los Angeles County, about 15 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. It came as Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents conducted enforcement operations in the area and arrested at least 44 people on alleged immigration violations. More demonstrations followed across the area. Police have countered by firing tear gas, pepper spray and flash-bang concussion rounds toward gathering crowds. Some protesters hurled large chunks of broken concrete at officers, slashed tires and defaced buildings, according to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Contributing: Reuters


The Herald Scotland
15 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
LA protest photos show tensions over ICE detentions
On the social media platform X, California Gov. Gavin Newsom called Hegseth's threat to deploy active troops on American citizens "deranged behavior." The Secretary of Defense is now threatening to deploy active-duty Marines on American soil against its own citizens. This is deranged behavior. — Gavin Newsom (@GavinNewsom) June 8, 2025 In a June 8 social media post Trump said, "These Radical Left protests, by instigators and often paid troublemakers, will NOT BE TOLERATED." White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Trump signed a memo a day earlier deploying the guardsmen "to address the lawlessness that has been allowed to fester." In an earlier post, Newsome accused Trump of deploying the National Guard "not because there is a shortage of law enforcement, but because they want a spectacle." "Don't give them one," added Newsom. "Never use violence. Speak out peacefully." Photos of the protests show protestors carrying Mexican flags, being arrested by police or having milk poured into their eyes after getting caught in chemical agents fired by law enforcement. The protests came after the Department of Homeland Security said it arrested 118 people accused of being undocumented immigrants in Los Angeles. Contributing: Bart Jansen; USA TODAY Julia is a trending reporter for USA TODAY. Connect with her on LinkedIn, X, Instagram and TikTok: @juliamariegz, or email her at jgomez@