
Trump shocks with threat he could take over sanctuary cities and arrest unruly mayors under martial law
The president's post to Truth Social Wednesday morning also implied that he could take action to arrest 'insurrectionist' mayors in those cities that uphold policies making it harder for federal immigration enforcement agents to do their jobs.
The wild suggestion came in the form of a meme that Trump reposted to his social media account.
A pro-MAGA account posted a black and white image of Abraham Lincoln surrounded by words meant to come from the perspective of the 16th U.S. president.
''Sanctuary City' mayors are defying federal law,' it reads. 'They are insurrectionists just like the southern governors during the Civil War.'
'President Trump should declare martial law in those cities, arrest the mayors, appoint military governors, and restore the rule of law, just like I did,' the Lincoln-voiced meme reads.
The post came as a response to Trump's lengthy Truth Social post made on Tuesday night demanding that the Senate confirm his 'highly qualified judges and U.S. attorneys.'
Trump claimed that the states where his appointments are still outstanding are the ones that have the most crime and need the most help.
'I would never be able to appoint Great Judges or U.S. Attorneys in California, New York, New Jersey, Illinois, Virginia, and other places, where there is, coincidentally, the highest level of crime and corruption — The places where fantastic people are most needed!' Trump lamented of Democrat blockades.
Martial law is invoked by governments during times of extreme crisis, like war, rebellion or major disasters. It usually involves the military helping take control of civilian affairs, and limits normal legal process and other civil liberties.
In the U.S., martial law was imposed in certain areas of the country during the Civil War by President Lincoln to suppress rebellion. It was also used in Hawaii during World War II after Pearl Harbor attacks.
Many Republicans feel that the mass amounts of illegal immigration and years of open-border policies under former President Joe Biden constitutes a crisis that would justify use of such extreme processes.
Trump has recently upped his war with sanctuary cities and states and their leadership.
Federal immigration agents under the Department of Homeland Security have been tasked with conducting raids in cities and states that rebuke federal laws.
Earlier this year in Los Angeles, California, violent riots broke out between pro-immigration demonstrators and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents. Rioters set fires, looted stores and physically assaulted agents and officers.
Other areas this year where ICE raids have been carried out – sometimes without cooperation from local authorities – were in New York City and Colorado.
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The Independent
22 minutes ago
- The Independent
‘Former Russian America': Ex-Trump adviser tells CNN that for Putin, Alaska is next best thing to Moscow for summit
Former Trump National Security Adviser John Bolton appeared on CNN on Friday night, comparing the meeting between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska to Trump inviting the Taliban to peace negotiations at Camp David. Trump announced on Truth Social earlier that the 'highly anticipated meeting' would take place on Friday, August 15. 'It's very gracious of Putin to come to former Russian America for this summit,' a sarcastic Bolton noted. 'This is not quite as bad as Trump inviting the Taliban to Camp David to talk about the peace negotiations in Afghanistan, but it certainly reminds one of that.' Trump later canceled the talks with the Taliban in September 2019. 'The only better place for Putin than Alaska would be if the summit were being held in Moscow,' Bolton added. 'So, the initial setup, I think, is a great victory for Putin. He's a rogue leader of a pariah state, and he's going to be welcomed into the United States.' He went on to argue that the situation 'is sliding very quickly in Russia's direction.' 'We're not quite back at February the 28th, in the Oval Office, when Trump told [Ukrainian President Volodymyr] Zelenskyy, 'You don't have any cards.' But what's happening is that Russia and the United States are discussing what terms they're going to present to Zelenskyy, and it may well be that Zelenskyy has no choice here,' he added. 'Surrendering is always one way to get a peace deal.' Bolton suggested that 'even without the meeting, Putin's got his old magic back with Trump.' 'All that disappointment, all that outrage … now you're talking about a deal between Trump and Putin? Think of the press that will get. I have to say, from the strategic perspective, from the U.S. interest perspective, this was not a good day,' said the former U.N. ambassador. Host Kaitlan Collins noted that Putin can't go to Europe for a meeting, as there's an International Criminal Court warrant out for his arrest. Bolton argued that they could have met in Vienna or Geneva, where Putin met then-President Joe Biden in 2021. 'They're basically considered U.N. cities, and the ICC warrant could have been waived, and I don't think anybody would have objected, frankly,' he said. Bolton said, 'If Trump really wanted to get an equitable peace deal,' he could 'certainly listen to what Putin had to say.' 'But they're doing a lot more than listening. They could receive the material and send it to Zelenskyy, and hear what he thought of it first,' he added. Bolton, who served as national security adviser during Trump's first term, said, 'This sounds an awful lot' like the peace plan proposed by Vice President JD Vance during the campaign last year. 'Russia keeps all the territory it currently holds, a demilitarized zone, maybe with a peacekeeping force on the Ukrainian side is set up, and Ukraine pledges not to join NATO,' said Bolton. 'If Ukraine agrees to a ceasefire here, it's agreeing to its new border with Russia, effectively. I think this is a very dangerous point for Zelenskyy and the Ukrainian government.'


Daily Mirror
22 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Donald Trump posts video of UK 'free Tommy Robinson' march saying 'amazing to see'
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Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Trump-backed peace push leaves Azerbaijan and Armenia one step from final accord, top diplomat says
Aug 9 (Reuters) - A peace push backed by U.S. President Donald Trump leaves Azerbaijan and Armenia just one step from a final peace deal and is a paradigm shift in the strategically important South Caucasus region, a top Azerbaijani diplomat said on Saturday. Trump welcomed Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in the White House on Friday and witnessed their signing of a joint declaration aimed at drawing a line under their decades-long on-off conflict. Russia, a traditional broker and ally of Armenia in the strategically important South Caucasus region which is crisscrossed with oil and gas pipelines, was not included despite its border guards being stationed on the border between Armenia and Iran. While Moscow said it supported the summit, it proposed "implementing solutions developed by the countries of the region themselves with the support of their immediate neighbours – Russia, Iran and Turkey" to avoid what it called the "sad experience" of Western efforts to mediate in the Middle East. Azerbaijan's close ally, NATO member Turkey, welcomed the accord. Russia-ally Iran also welcomed the agreement but warned against any foreign intervention near its borders. Baku and Yerevan have been at odds since the late 1980s when Nagorno-Karabakh, a mountainous Azerbaijani region mostly populated by ethnic Armenians, broke away from Azerbaijan with support from Armenia. Azerbaijan took back full control of the region in 2023, prompting almost all of the territory's 100,000 ethnic Armenians to flee to Armenia. "The chapter of enmity is closed and now we're moving towards lasting peace," said Elin Suleymanov, Azerbaijan's ambassador to Britain, predicting that the wider region's prosperity and transport links would be transformed for the better. "This is a paradigm shift," said Suleymanov, who as a former envoy to Washington who used to work in President Aliyev's office, is one of his country's most senior diplomats. Suleymanov declined to speculate on when a final peace deal would be signed however, noting that Aliyev had said he wanted it to happen soon. There remained only one obstacle, said Suleymanov, which was for Armenia to amend its constitution to remove a reference to Nagorno-Karabakh. "Azerbaijan is ready to sign any time once Armenia fulfils the very basic commitment of removing its territorial claim against Azerbaijan in its consitution," he said. Pashinyan this year called for a referendum to change the constitution, but no date for it has been set yet. Armenia is to hold parliamentary elections in June 2026, and the new constitution is expected to be drafted before the vote. The Armenian leader said on X that the Washington summit would pave the way to end the decades of conflict and to open up transport connections in the region that he said would unlock strategic economic opportunities. Friday's agreement saw Armenia hand exclusive U.S. development rights to a strategic transit corridor through the South Caucasus that the White House said would facilitate greater exports of energy and other resources. The proposed Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity (TRIPP) which would run across southern Armenia, would give Azerbaijan a direct route to its exclave of Nackchivan and in turn to Turkey. Asked when the transit rail route would start running, Suleymanov said that would depend on cooperation between the U.S. and Armenia whom he said were already in talks. Joshua Kucera, Senior South Caucasus analyst at International Crisis Group, said the Washington summit was not the easy win that Trump may have hoped for as the agreements left many questions unanswered. The issue of Armenia's constitution continued to threaten to derail the process, and key questions about how the new transport corridor would work in practice had not been addressed. "Key details are missing, including about how customs checks and security will work and the nature of Armenia's reciprocal access to Azerbaijani territory. These could be serious stumbling blocks," said Kucera. Control of the corridor, which will be operated under Armenian law, is a sensitive issue, with Azerbaijan wary of Armenian law. Suleymanov played down suggestions that Russia, which still has extensive security and economic interests in Armenia, was being disadvantaged. "Anybody and everybody can benefit from this if they choose to," he said.