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Donald Trump vows to 'solve' LA immigration unrest as raids spark fury
More than 1,000 protesters surrounded a federal building in downtown LA on Friday, and additional demonstrations broke out Saturday in Paramount, just south of the city
Bloomberg
President Donald Trump warned that the federal government will intervene in Los Angeles to restore order, as his administration began mobilizing the National Guard in response to growing unrest over a wave of immigration raids.
'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!!!' Trump wrote on Truth Social on Saturday.
The deployment plans come as demonstrations intensified for a second day following US Immigration and Customs Enforcement actions across the city. ICE said it arrested 2,000 undocumented people a day this week nationwide, including 118 individuals in the Los Angeles area.
More than 1,000 protesters surrounded a federal building in downtown LA on Friday, and additional demonstrations broke out Saturday in Paramount, just south of the city. Local media reported tear gas and flash-bang grenades deployed to disperse the crowds.
The Department of Homeland Security earlier Saturday accused Democratic leaders in California, including Newsom and Bass, of contributing to violence.
'The violent targeting of law enforcement in Los Angeles by lawless rioters is despicable and Mayor Bass and Governor Newsom must call for it to end,' DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement.
Newsom said the federal government's plan to take control of the state National Guard and deploy 2,000 troops was 'purposefully inflammatory' and likely to escalate tensions. Bass said the 'tactics sow terror in our communities.'
'The LAPD is not involved in civil immigration enforcement,' Police Chief Jim McDonnell wrote on social media. 'While the LAPD will continue to have a visible presence in all our communities to ensure public safety, we will not assist or participate in any sort of mass deportations nor will the LAPD try to determine an individual's immigration status.'
DHS Secretary Kristi Noem warned the protesters that any violence against officers will be prosecuted. 'You will not stop us or slow us down,' she said in an X post. Multiple arrests have been made, FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino said in an X post.
ICE has pledged to continue ramping up arrests as authorities carry out Trump's promise to oversee the largest deportation effort in US history. The president has also threatened to cut off federal funding to the most populous US state after disputes over immigration, transgender issues and allegations of antisemitism on college campuses.
Small Business Administration chief Kelly Loeffler announced on Saturday that her agency would begin relocating its regional office out of LA, citing what she described as the city's failure to cooperate with ICE.
'If a city won't protect its people, we won't stay,' Loeffler wrote on X.

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'These raids undermine public safety and retraumatize communities already living in fear,' she said during a press California National Guard, which answers to the governor, was not involved in the federal operation. Legal analysts say deploying active-duty troops under Title 10, especially without a state emergency, could be seen as an overreach of federal liberties groups, including the ACLU of California, have denounced the raids and called for congressional hearings. 'What's happening in California today could happen anywhere tomorrow,' one ACLU spokesperson Los Angeles immigration raids have reignited national debate over federal authority, sanctuary laws, and the militarization of civil responses. Protesters vow to continue marching, while legal advocates are working to provide aid to detainees and challenge the constitutionality of the in Los Angeles are very likely to continue demonstrating despite recent clashes and arrests. 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First Post
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