
Doechii blasts Trump administration's ‘ruthless attacks' in LA amid Ice raids
The rapper Doechii turned her acceptance speech at the BET awards on Monday night into a powerful call for justice as she criticized the Trump administration's deployment of military forces on protesters in Los Angeles.
The Grammy winner used the stage to highlight the immigration raids and protest crackdowns happening just miles from where the ceremony took place in Los Angeles.
After being named best female hip-hop artist – her first-ever BET award – Doechii acknowledged her fellow nominees, then shifted the spotlight to the issues unfolding outside the venue.
'There are ruthless attacks that are creating fear and chaos in our communities in the name of law and order,' said Doechii, who won a Grammy for best rap album, only the third woman to win in that category.
The BET ceremony took place as tensions simmered across Los Angeles following a weekend of protest over immigration raids that took place on Friday, with dozens of people arrested. On Monday, Donald Trump authorized the deployment of an additional 2,000 national guard members in response to the protests, bringing the total number of guards deployed to the city to more than 4,100.
'Trump is using military forces to stop a protest,' Doechii said in her speech. 'I want you all to consider what kind of government it appears to be when every time we exercise our democratic right to protest, the military is deployed against us. What type of government is that?'
Doechii's words drew applause from the audience at the Peacock Theater, where the awards airing live.
'People are being swept up and torn from their families,' she continued. 'I feel like it's my responsibility as an artist to use this moment to speak up for all oppressed people … We all deserve to live in hope and not fear. I hope we stand together.'
As Doechii delivered her message as demonstrations continued in Los Angeles and cities across the US, including New York, Chicago, Dallas and San Francisco. In downtown Los Angeles on Monday evening, law enforcement were seen pushing several hundred protesters east through Little Tokyo as night began to approach.
Officers, who all appeared to be from the Los Angeles police department, used flash bangs and shot projectiles into the crowd as they pushed the protesters through a crowded, popular commercial area where bystanders and restaurant workers rushed to get out of their way. Some protesters set off fireworks and threw water bottles at the officers, yelling 'Shame!' or chanting, 'ICE out of LA'.
California leaders have condemned Trump's actions as inflammatory. Karen Bass, the Los Angeles mayor, criticized the deployment of national guard troops and marines as a 'deliberate attempt' by the Trump administration to 'create disorder and chaos in our city'.
'I feel like we are part of an experiment that we did not ask to be a part of,' Bass said on Monday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
33 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Inside 'wild west' state where Americans are flocking for new anti-aging drugs so powerful they're banned everywhere else
Farbood Nivi has lots of plans. Dying isn't one of them. 'If there's a chance I can live indefinitely, I'll do what it takes to make that happen,' says the 48-year-old tech bro in Los Angeles.


Daily Mail
34 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
BREAKING NEWS Aaron Rodgers drops shock marriage bombshell at first official Steelers training
New Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers confirmed that he is married following weeks of speculation. More to follow.


Reuters
34 minutes ago
- Reuters
Los Angeles, progressive beacon at center of anti-Trump backlash
LOS ANGELES, June 10 (Reuters) - Protests in Los Angeles against raids on suspected undocumented immigrants have turned into the strongest domestic backlash against President Donald Trump since he took office in January. Here is how the Democratic-leaning city and state of California vary from Trump's Republicans and his support in the U.S. heartland. Nationwide, Trump won around 2.5 million more votes than his Democratic rival Kamala Harris in the November presidential election but in Los Angeles, Harris won by a margin of roughly two to one. Of the 50 U.S. states, California backed Harris by the fifth largest margin. California is also home to several top-level Democrats, including Harris herself, and long-time former Speaker of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi. Governor Gavin Newsom is a Democrat, as is the mayor of Los Angeles, Karen Bass. Both have complained about Trump's tactics this week. The party raises millions in the state from wealthy donors and grassroots supporters, sometimes in a single day. At 27.3%, California has the highest foreign-born population of any U.S. state, compared to 13.9% of the total U.S. population, according to a 2024 Census report. Nearly half of Angelenos are Hispanic or Latino and some 35% of the city's total population is foreign-born, according to the American Community Survey, with many cultural and business ties to Mexico, which is only about a two-hour drive south. Faced with persistently bad air quality, especially in cities with strong driving cultures such as Los Angeles, California has developed some of the strictest environmental regulations in the country, opposed by many Republicans. A landmark plan to end the sale of gasoline-only vehicles by 2035 in California is in the crosshairs of a battle between its Democratic leadership and the Republican-run federal government, also because many other states replicate California's first-in-the-nation action. In May, the Republican-run Senate in Washington voted to ban the plan and it is now awaiting Trump's signature. He is expected to sign it this week, according to industry officials. American movies and television are one of the most visible U.S. exports, emanating from an LA-based industry that had been hailed by liberals for boosting diversity but criticized by some conservatives for creating films that include LGBT stories. In May, Trump suggested a tariff on movies produced in foreign countries to protect a domestic industry that he said was "dying a very fast death." But when China retaliated by saying it would curb American film imports, he prompted laughter at a cabinet meeting by a response that signaled his derision for Hollywood: "I think I've heard of worse things."