
Trump says LA will be ‘set free' as ICE protests continue
Donald Trump vowed to "liberate Los Angeles from the Migrant Invasion" following clashes between the National Guard and anti-immigration enforcement protesters.
Trump directed federal departments to take action to expel "Illegals" and end "Migrant riots," claiming Los Angeles has been "invaded and occupied."
Tensions escalated after ICE operations led to 118 arrests, with protests resulting in vehicle fires, graffiti, and clashes between police and demonstrators, prompting the LAPD to declare a tactical alert and unlawful assembly.
Trump threatened to deploy US Marines and introduced the phrase "they spit, we hit" in response to the unrest, reminiscent of his earlier controversial statement in 2020 of "when the looting starts, the shooting starts."
Governor Gavin Newsom and LA Mayor Karen Bass urged calm, with Newsom accusing Trump of manufacturing a crisis and Bass expressing disappointment, calling the troop deployment unnecessary and political.
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BBC News
19 minutes ago
- BBC News
Zia Yusuf: Reform UK burka row is 'storm in a teacup'
Former Reform UK chairman Zia Yusuf has called a row over a social media post - in which he said it was "dumb" for one of his MPs to call for a burka ban - a "storm in a teacup". Speaking to BBC Radio 4's Today programme, Yusuf said he regretted the post and that "exhaustion led to a poor decision". Shortly after criticising MP Sarah Pochin, Yusuf quit as chairman saying that trying to get Reform UK elected was not "a good use of my time".However, two days later he returned to work for the party albeit in a different role, leading the party's Doge unit, a team inspired by the US Department of Government Efficiency, set up by President Donald Trump and Elon Musk. The initiative aims to cut wasteful spending in the councils Reform now why he had resigned as chairman, Yusuf said: "I've been working pretty much non-stop, virtually no days off."It is very difficult to keep going at that pace."He said one of the reasons he had "changed his decision so quickly" and returned to work for the party, was that he had been "inundated" by supportive messages from Reform voters and members. The series of events began last Wednesday when Pochin, the newly-elected MP for Runcorn and Helsby, asked Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer if he would join France and Denmark in banning the burka, a veil worn by some Muslim women that covers the face and body, "in the interests of public safety".The following day Yusuf, who is a Muslim, posted on X: "I do think it's dumb for a party to ask the PM if they would do something the party itself wouldn't do".Speaking to the BBC on Monday, Yusuf said "the thing that frustrated me at the time" was that Pochin had not chosen to ask something that was party for his views on a ban, he said: "If I was an MP I would think about it very deeply, I think I probably would be in favour of banning face coverings in public writ large, not just the burka."I'm very queasy and uneasy about banning things that for example would be unconstitutional in the US but we have a particular situation in the UK."He said he did not believe Islam was "a threat to the country" but added that the UK had "a problem with assimilation". Over the weekend, Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch was also asked her views on banning the burka. She told the Telegraph: "People should be allowed to wear whatever they want, not what their husband is asking them to wear or what their community says that they should wear."However, she said that organisations should be able to decide what their staff wear and that she asked people coming to her constituency surgeries to remove face coverings "whether it's a burka or a balaclava". "I'm not talking to people who are not going to show me their face," she Muslim Council of Britain accused her of "desperation" adding: "Kemi Badenoch isn't setting the agenda - she's scrambling to keep up with Reform UK's divisive rhetoric."


Telegraph
19 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Watch: Trump falls on the stairs of Air Force One
Donald Trump stumbled as he climbed up the stairs of Air Force One, sparking comparisons with Joe Biden, the predecessor Mr Trump once mocked for doing the same. Mr Trump, 78, was filmed losing his balance before quickly steadying himself as he boarded the jet to return to Washington DC after a golfing weekend in New Jersey. The footage showed shock on the US president's face when he tripped on Sunday, before he composed himself to smile and wave at the cameras at the top of the stairs. Moments later, Marco Rubio, the US secretary of state, almost fell at a similar point on the stairs. OMG! Marco Rubio just TRIPPED while walking up Air Force One immediately after Trump almost fell! According to MAGA logic, Rubio and Trump are mentally declining and need to be removed from office ASAP! — Harry Sisson (@harryjsisson) June 8, 2025 The White House has not yet responded to the clip, which is being widely compared to Mr Biden's repeated public tumbles on the same stairs during his presidency. Mr Trump, along with his allies and Ring-wing commentators, repeatedly seized on the former president's falls during his tenure, using them to raise concerns about his age and health. 'Joe Biden can't even walk up a flight of stairs on Air Force One,' Mr Trump said during a speech in 2023. Later that year, while calling the Biden administration incompetent, he said Mr Biden uses 'the children's stairs' on Air Force One and that 'he can't quite make it up or down' those stairs. In a high-profile incident in February last year, Mr Biden, who had been moved to the shorter stairs used by the media to board the presidential plane, fell twice as he climbed up. In April, Mr Trump was given a clean bill of health, with White House physicians saying he was in 'excellent cognitive and physical health', largely owing to his 'active lifestyle'.


Reuters
23 minutes ago
- Reuters
Breaking News Headlines Latest Views
China hit back hard against the president's tariffs while Britain's speedy deal favoured the US. The European Union cannot afford to antagonise Trump, in part because of Ukraine, but does not need to grovel. If it cannot strike a good accord quickly, it should play the long game.