
Los Angeles protesters demonstrate against Ice raids
US national guard troops and LA police clashed with demonstrators on Sunday, as teargas and pepper spray were used to disperse the crowds who had been protesting against the raids by immigration authorities which began Friday afternoon
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Sky News
40 minutes ago
- Sky News
Downtown LA is a scene of pandemonium and lawlessness
Why you can trust Sky News A shirtless man waving a Mexican flag stands atop a burning car in the heart of Los Angeles, as another man throws a traffic cone into the flames and some play drums and shout chants in opposition to immigration officials. In the background, city hall can be glimpsed through a haze of thick black smoke. The downtown district of one of America's biggest cities was a scene of pandemonium and lawlessness as protests, which had previously been mainly peaceful, turned ugly. Critics of Donald Trump said the president's extraordinary decision to deploy National Guard troops, defying the wishes of the state's governor, had inflamed tensions and stoked emotions. The 101 Freeway, the main highway cutting through the downtown area, was also closed down for much of the day as police and protesters faced off, with flash bang devices sending some people scattering. Bottles and other projectiles were hurled towards police, who responded by using tear gas and rubber bullets. It was this chaos, his critics say, that Donald Trump wanted to provoke. Trump's decision to call in 2,000 National Guard troops, several hundred of whom were on the streets of LA on Sunday, was taken without consultation with the California governor and LA mayor, and marked an extraordinary escalation by the president. The military arrived on Sunday morning and was ordered to guard federal buildings, after two days of protest against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers. As part of Trump's closed border policy, ICE has been ordered to find, detain and deport as many illegal immigrants as possible, and it was these raids that stoked the first signs of protest on Friday into the weekend. By midday Sunday, the military was surrounded by protesters outside the Metropolitan Detention Centre in downtown LA. It was here that many immigrants had been held before being shipped off to detention facilities. The walls and floors are covered in expletive-ridden graffiti, reading f*** ICE. The Los Angeles police soon split the crowd and drove a wedge between the National Guard and the crowd. California Governor Gavin Newsom has called Donald Trump's acts those of a "dictator, not a president". He's formally requested that the Trump administration withdraw the National Guard. The White House say the military will remain there until order is restored. Five hundred marines are still on standby. Los Angeles Police Department police chief Jim McDonnell, asked whether the National Guard was needed, said: "This thing has gotten out of control." He said that although the LAPD would not initially have requested assistance from the National Guard, the disorder had caused him to reevaluate his assessment. Several people were arrested. Sky News witnessed a young woman, who called herself Gabriella, riding her motorbike at speed towards a line of police officers. One of the police officers used his arm to push her off the bike. She said she was protesting because her "people were being rounded up." Politicians on both sides of the aisle condemned the violence, but some vehemently disagreed about what actions led to the escalation.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Tariff-hit firms should review bonuses or risk backlash, US lawyers warn
Businesses hit by tariffs should start reviewing their bonus policies and how deeply they may need to cut executive payouts if they hope to avoid a public backlash, lawyers have said. Partners at the Silicon Valley law firm Cooley said that while pay was probably the last thing on bosses' minds as they scramble to adapt to Donald Trump's unpredictable tariff policies, pay committees should start assessing their options soon. 'Many will encounter rising material costs and reduced profit margins, particularly given the significant pressure on the supply chain,' a memo by its top lawyers said. 'Taken together with the recent stock market volatility, companies (both public and private) will need to address the impact of these challenges on their business and, importantly, consider the effects on director and executive compensation programs.' Cooley – whose clients have included Netflix, Apple, Meta, and Twitter before its takeover by Elon Musk and rebrand as X – said that without a proper review of pay policies, companies may end up handing big bonuses to bosses while the rest of the workforce suffers from cost cuts and job losses. That may be due to remuneration policies that do not automatically account for the impact of so-called 'black swan events', such as a dramatic U-turn in US trade policy or a global pandemic. Michael Bergmann, a partner at Cooley, told the Guardian: 'There is a meaningful risk that rank-and-file employees are going to suffer here, and that could take the form of layoffs, folks losing their jobs or wages.' The memo said: 'Given the overall macroeconomic and sociopolitical climate, there is a strong risk that any accommodation for those [tariff] impacts will be viewed as unduly rewarding executives, particularly if rank-and-file employees do not benefit in a proportionate way. Accordingly, compensation committees and boards must tread deliberately and carefully.' Cooley lawyers said there was also a possibility that executives might be unduly punished for tariff impacts that were beyond their control, and that this should also be considered by remuneration committees. It is likely that pay packets will start to reflect tariff impacts from early next year. Trump rolled out sweeping tariffs against most countries in April, in a shock move that left companies looking at how they could offset a potential hit to trade and revenues. The US president later paused and then reduced most tariffs, but last week he refocused attention on steel and aluminium imports, doubling tariffs for all countries except the UK to 50%. Tech companies have also suffered as a result of Trump's trade war with Beijing, which has included an order restricting AI chip exports to China. Sign up to Business Today Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning after newsletter promotion While Cooley's original memo was aimed at US companies, Bergman said the warning was relevant to others around the world, including in the UK, with the ripple effects also due to hurt businesses even if they do not directly trade with US companies. 'The company's nationality is not really the driving question here,' he said. Luke Hildyard, the director of the High Pay Centre thinktank, suggested the tariff fallout should prompt a more fundamental review of executives' multimillion-pound pay packets. 'The entire flawed premise of vast executive pay awards is that business success is driven by a tiny number of business leaders, and that companies should pay whatever it takes to attract and retain the best ones,' he said. 'The tariff furore is only the latest example – following energy supply challenges in Europe, the pandemic or the supply chain issues in its aftermath – of business leaders being pretty powerless in the face of wider events. Maybe the most useful lesson here is that they are mortals like the rest of us and more moderate pay awards that reflect that fact would be appropriate.'


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
From Keir Starmer's position on immigration to an old non-stick pan: Edith Pritchett's week in Venn diagrams
From Keir Starmer's position on immigration to an old non-stick pan: Edith Pritchett's week in Venn diagrams – cartoon