logo
What to know about the LA protests as Trump deploys National Guard

What to know about the LA protests as Trump deploys National Guard

Independent5 hours ago

Donald Trump has authorised the deployment of 2,000 National Guard troops to Los Angeles after an immigration crackdown erupted into mass protests on Saturday.
Footage has shown the protesters throwing rocks at law enforcement vehicles and others trying to get in the way of a Marshals Service bus after more than a hundred arrests were made.
Here, the Independent breaks down what you need to know about the unrest in LA.
How did the protest start?
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers conducted search warrants at multiple locations on Friday.
One search was executed outside a clothing warehouse in the Fashion District, after a judge found probable cause that the employer was using fictitious documents for some of its workers, according to representatives for Homeland Security Investigations and the US Attorney's Office.
Crowds tried to stop ICE agents from driving away following the arrests.
Another protest was sparked outside a federal building in downtown LA, after demonstrators discovered detainees were allegedly being held in the basement of the building.
Protests then erupted in Paramount, LA, after it appeared federal law enforcement officers were conducting another immigration operation in the area.
The protests also spread to the nearby city of Compton.
LA County Sheriff Robert Luna stated that as many as 400 people were involved in the demonstration.
The ICE operations in Los Angeles resulted in the arrests of 118 immigrants this week, including 44 people in Friday's operations, according to the Department of Homeland Security.
The arrests sparked protesters to gather outside a federal detention center, chanting, "Set them free, let them stay!"
Why is Trump deploying the National Guard?
On Saturday, Trump ordered the deployment of at least 2,000 National Guard troops to LA.
"If Governor Gavin Newscum, of California, and Mayor Karen Bass, of Los Angeles, can't do their jobs, which everyone knows they can't, then the Federal Government will step in and solve the problem, RIOTS & LOOTERS, the way it should be solved!!!' he wrote on his Truth Social platform on Saturday.
California Governor Gavin Newsom also wrote on social media that the "federal government is moving to take over the California National Guard and deploy 2,000 soldiers. That move is purposefully inflammatory and will only escalate tensions.'
He added deployment is "the wrong mission and will erode public trust."
However, it is unclear if Trump can call in the National Guard without his approval.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How Trump's immigration crackdown sparked LA uprising
How Trump's immigration crackdown sparked LA uprising

Telegraph

time13 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

How Trump's immigration crackdown sparked LA uprising

It began with co-ordinated raids on locations throughout Los Angeles on Friday. Immigration officials, backed by heavily armed FBI officers with assault weapons and body armour, stormed a clothing factory and at least two other locations in Latino areas of the city, trying to make good on orders to ramp-up the pace of deportations. Crowds gathered outside Ambiance Apparel in the city's Fashion District within minutes. 'You do not have to sign anything,' shouted a protester with a bullhorn dispensing free legal advice. Officers there said they were armed with search warrants to investigate 'fictitious employee documents'. Videos posted online captured what happened next. A masked protester places himself in front of an SUV carrying detainees as he tries to thwart the arrests. Then comes the sound of tear gas canisters being tossed in the street to clear the crowds, and the cracks of flash-bangs as darkness falls. The raids were the trigger for two days of clashes between protesters and federal officers in Los Angeles, where fires flared and fireworks exploded, prompting Donald Trump to order 2,000 National Guard troops onto the streets of the city. They arrived on Sunday morning, much to the fury of the Democratic leadership in California. Gavin Newsom, the state governor, said their presence would only make things worse. 'The president is attempting to inflame passions and provoke a response,' he said in a fundraising email as he tried to rally opposition to the US president's move. 'He would like nothing more than for this provocative show of force – and [Secretary of Defence] Pete Hegseth's absurd threat to deploy United States Marines on American soil – to escalate tensions and incite violence.' Homeland Security Investigations said officers arrested 44 people in Friday's raids. They appeared to mark a fresh phase of the Trump administration's immigration crackdown, amid worries that the pace of deportations had fallen far short of the president's aim of one million people deported in a year. Officials now say they will increasingly focus on workplaces to root out illegal immigrants. Karen Bass, the Democratic mayor of the city, condemned the raids. 'I am deeply angered by what has taken place,' she said. 'These tactics sow terror in our communities and disrupt basic principles of safety in our city. We will not stand for this.' Television footage showed unmarked vehicles resembling military transports loaded with uniformed agents streaming through Los Angeles on Friday. Dozens of people were reportedly arrested around a Home Depot store in the heavily Latino city of Paramount, just outside Los Angeles, where street vendors and day labourers, looking for a few hours' work on construction sites, gather daily. 'You will not stop us or slow us down' Some of the worst violence erupted nearby, as word spread that Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were using nearby offices as a staging area for detainees. Officers with batons and tear gas canisters faced off with demonstrators after authorities ordered crowds of protesters to disperse at nightfall. Protesters hurled bricks and chunks of concrete taken from pallets of building material, while federal officers responded with rounds of tear gas and pepper spray. Worse followed on Saturday, when protests erupted for a second day. Fires set by protesters threw up plumes of thick black smoke. They set off fireworks and used shopping carts to barricade the street, using chunks from broken cinder blocks to pelt Border Patrol trucks. Police said they had been targeted with rocks and that demonstrators had thrown Molotov cocktails. Kristi Noem, the head of the Department of Homeland Security, said on X: 'A message to the LA rioters: you will not stop us or slow us down.' As darkness fell on the West Coast, the Trump administration announced it was deploying the National Guard, pitting it against the city's Democratic leadership. Such action is rare. It is the first time since 1965 that Washington has deployed the National Guard without the backing of state leadership. Karoline Leavitt, White House press secretary, said: 'The Trump Administration has a zero tolerance policy for criminal behaviour and violence, especially when that violence is aimed at law enforcement officers trying to do their jobs. These criminals will be arrested and swiftly brought to justice.' The administration believes it has public opinion on its side after winning a mandate for a mass deportation programme in last year's election. A CBS poll published on Sunday, and conducted before the weekend's violence, found some 54 per cent of respondents backed Mr Trump. It was published just as the first National Guard troops were spotted in Los Angeles, mobilising around the federal complex in the downtown part of the city, one of the hotspots for protests. Protesters say rather than stamping out opposition to the Trump administration's tactics, their presence will make matters worse. 'Bringing the National Guard in is going to spark a national riot,' Vitaly Nieves told the Washington Post. 'It won't just be in California, it'll spread to other states.'

ABC News suspends journalist after calling Trump and adviser ‘world-class' haters
ABC News suspends journalist after calling Trump and adviser ‘world-class' haters

The Guardian

time15 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

ABC News suspends journalist after calling Trump and adviser ‘world-class' haters

ABC News has suspended its senior national correspondent after he described top White House aide Stephen Miller as 'richly endowed with the capacity for hatred' on social media. In a now deleted post, Terry Moran, who recently conducted an interview with Donald Trump, said that the president and his deputy chief of staff, Miller, were both 'world-class' haters. An ABC News spokesperson said that Moran 'has been suspended pending further evaluation', adding: 'ABC News stands for objectivity and impartiality in its news coverage and does not condone subjective personal attacks on others. The post does not reflect the views of ABC News and violated our standards.' According to a screenshot of the post, Moran said that Miller was not the brains behind Trumpism and his ability to translate the movement's 'impulses' into policy was 'not brains. It's bile.' 'You can see that his hatreds are his spiritual nourishment,' Moran added. 'He eats his hate.' He added of Trump: 'Trump is a world-class hater. But his hatred only a means to an end, and that end [is] his own glorification.' Miller shot back, saying: 'The most important fact about Terry's full public meltdown is what it shows about the corporate press in America. For decades, the privileged anchors and reporters narrating and gatekeeping our society have been radicals adopting a journalist's pose. Terry pulled off his mask.' The White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, described Moran's rhetoric as 'unacceptable and unhinged' on Fox News. 'I think this speaks to the distrust that the American public have in the legacy media,' she added. JD Vance, the vice-president, described Moran's post as a 'vile smear'. ABC News' suspension of Moran comes nearly six months after the organisation agreed to pay $15m to a Trump presidential foundation or museum after he filed a defamation case following anchor George Stephanopoulos repeating an assertion on ABC's This Week that Trump had been found 'liable for rape' in a lawsuit filed by the columnist E Jean Carroll. He had not. The latest incident will probably deepen suspicion on the right that US mainstream media outlets are fundamentally biased against the administration. In its statement, ABC News maintained a position of neutrality, saying: 'ABC News stands for objectivity and impartiality in its news coverage and does not condone subjective personal attacks on others.'

Woke school program turns beloved children's character trans and warns of racist babies
Woke school program turns beloved children's character trans and warns of racist babies

Daily Mail​

time20 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Woke school program turns beloved children's character trans and warns of racist babies

A woke school program turned a beloved children's character transgender and warned teachers of racist babies, according to a new report. Head Start, a federally-funded educational program for children aged three-five, held webinars that said infants 'discriminate between faces by race' and that 'babies can categorize people by gender or race,' according to a Functional Government Initiative (FGI) report. A series of 2020 webinars, focused on 'anti-bias and anti-racism strategies,' were distributed to teachers, parents and children and specifically claimed that babies can start to 'discriminate' at three months. At six months, babies can classify people by race and gender before they use racial categories to reason about others' and 'may use race to choose playmates' as a toddler, the presentation, reviewed by FGI, said. By age five, 'some children express preference for their own race' and have learned 'many of the same racial attitudes as adults' by the time they go to kindergarten, it found. The national program, run by Dr. Deborah Bergeron at the time, also proposed that children's activities need to become 'more inclusive,' including the traditional nursery rhyme Old MacDonald Had a Farm. Instead of the jingle's classic 'Old MacDonald had a farm, E-I-E-I-O. And on that farm he had a pig,' Head Start switched the famous lyric to: 'Old MacDonald had a farm, E-I-E-I-O. And on that farm he/she/they had a pig,' one webinar shared. Head Start also pushed transgender ideology by referring to pregnant women as 'pregnant people' or 'birthing parents,' according to the program's social media posts, the report found. The report, titled 'Head State Needs a Restart,' noted that the goal of the program was 'started with the laudable goal of free early childhood education and health services to struggling children and families,' but has since 'used taxpayer dollars on priorities well outside of its original purpose.' 'Sadly, Head Start has fallen victim to the same politicization that many government programs have also fallen to in recent years, according to documents analyzed by FGI,' the report read. 'Head Start not only embraced the controversial ideology of diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI), they pushed it on parents, teachers, educators… and children.' Another webinar, reviewed by FGI, found that Head Start prompted questions to consider when discussing books, including how characters are 'represented.' A separate presentation went over 'Personally-Mediated Racism in Early Education,' and featured what appeared to be a growth chart of children with the phrase 'They're not too young to talk about race!' above. Another slide read: 'Advocated that 'all Head Start policies AND funding' should be applied through a 'racial equity lens".' Yet another slide dealt with exactly how teachers can go about talking to their young students about race, stating: 'We can start talking about race even if we don't have all the answers... 'But if we commit to collectively trying to talk about race with young children, we can lean on one another for support as we, together, envision a world where actively challenged racism each and every day,' the quote, provided by read on a slide. The government program also encouraged educators to read about critical race theory, including Nikole Hannah-Jones' 1619 Project and 'How to be Antiracist' by Ibram X Kendi. Meanwhile, in September 2022, Head Start and Sesame Street got together to push for 'racial justice' in children's education. For this, Sesame Street featured new characters, including ones that encouraged 'black pride' and 'black joy' among kids. Head Start not only has several DEI-based initiatives going for them, but also runs the Mexican American Opportunity Foundation that supports illegal migrants in getting an education. The group also offers assistance with applications for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which was created when former President Barack Obama was in office. Head Start, which is now directed by Tala Hooban, was initially launched in 1965 as a way to offer educational and 'high-quality services in safe and healthy settings that prepare children for school and life' to families in need. Program benefits are dispersed across the country by partner organizations, including non-profits, school districts, and faith-based organizations. Through all of these, Head Start programs provide nutritional support, medical assistance and education.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store