logo
From the Olympics to Oakland, California braces for Trump National Guard deployments

From the Olympics to Oakland, California braces for Trump National Guard deployments

President Trump's decision to deploy hundreds of National Guard troops to Washington has California officials on high alert, with some worrying that he intends to activate federal forces in the Bay Area and Southern California, especially during the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.
Trump said that his use of the National Guard to fight crime could expand to other cities, and suggested that local police have been unable to do the job.
Legal experts say it is highly unusual and troubling for forces to be deployed without a major crisis, such as civil unrest or a natural disaster. The Washington deployment is another example of Trump seeking to use the military for domestic endeavors, similar to his decision to send the National Guard to Los Angeles in June, amid an immigration crackdown that sparked protests, experts said.
Washington has long struggled with crime but has seen major reductions in recent years.
Officials in Oakland and Los Angeles — two cities the president mentioned by name — slammed Trump's comments about crime in their cities. Oakland Mayor Barbara Lee said in a statement that the president's characterization wasn't rooted in fact, but 'based in fear-mongering in an attempt to score cheap political points.' Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass called it 'performative' and a 'stunt.'
Trump has said he would consider deploying the military to Los Angeles once again to protect the 2028 Olympic Games. This month, he signed an executive order that named him chair of a White House task force on the Los Angeles Games.
The White House has not said specifically what role Trump would play in security arrangements.
Los Angeles City Councilmember Imelda Padilla, who sits on the city panel overseeing the Games, acknowledged last week that the city is a 'little nervous' about the federal government's plans for securing the event.
Congress recently approved $1 billion for security and planning for the Games. A representative for the Department of Homeland Security declined to explain to The Times how the funds will be used.
Padilla said her concern was based on the unpredictable nature of the administration, as well as recent immigration raids that have used masked, heavily armed agents to round up people at Home Depot parking lots and car washes.
'Everything that we're seeing with the raids was a real curveball to our city,' Padilla said during a Los Angeles Current Affairs Forum event. It dealt 'a real curveball to [efforts] to focus on the things that folks care about, like homelessness, like transportation ... economic development,' she said.
Bass, appearing on CNN this week, said that using the National Guard during the Olympics is 'completely appropriate.' She said that the city expects a 'federal response when we have over 200 countries here, meaning heads of state of over 200 countries. Of course you have the military involved. That is routine.'
But Bass made a distinction between L.A. Olympics security and the 'political stunt' she said Trump pulled by bringing in the National Guard and the U.S. Marines after protests over the federal government's immigration crackdown. That deployment faces ongoing legal challenges, with an appeals court ruling that Trump had the legal authority to send the National Guard.
'I believed then, and I believe now that Los Angeles was a test case, and I think D.C. is a test case as well,' Bass said. 'To say, well, we can take over your city whenever we want, and I'm the commander in chief, and I can use the troops whenever we want.'
On Monday, Trump tied his action to what has been a familiar theme to him: perceived urban decay.
'You look at Chicago, how bad it is, you look at Los Angeles, how bad it is. We have other cities that are very bad. New York has a problem. And then you have, of course, Baltimore and Oakland. We don't even mention that anymore —they're so far gone,' he said. 'We're not going to let it happen. We're not going to lose our cities over this.'
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said officers and agents deployed across the District of Columbia have so far made 23 arrests for offenses including homicide, possession with intent to distribute narcotics, lewd acts, reckless driving, fare evasion and not having permits. Six illegal handguns were seized, she said.
Citing crime as a reason to deploy National Guard troops without the support of a state governor is highly unprecedented, experts said. The National Guard has been deployed to Southern California before, notably during the 1992 L.A. riots and the civil unrest after George Floyd's murder in Minneapolis in 2020.
'It would be awful because he would be clearly violating his legal authorities and he'd be sued again by the governor and undoubtedly, by the mayors of L.A. and Oakland,' said William Banks, a law professor at Syracuse University. 'The citizens in those cities would be up in arms. They would be aghast that there are soldiers patrolling their streets.'
The District of Columbia does not have control over its National Guard, which gives the president wide latitude to deploy those troops. In California and other states, the head of the National Guard is the governor and there are legal limits on how federal troops can be used.
The Posse Comitatus Act, passed in 1878 after the end of Reconstruction, largely bars federal troops from being used in civilian law enforcement. The law reflects a tradition dating to the Revolutionary War era that sees military interference in American life as a threat to liberty and democracy.
'We have such a strong tradition that we don't use the military for domestic law enforcement, and it's a characteristic of authoritarian countries to see the military be used in that way,' said Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of the UC Berkeley Law School and a constitutional law expert. 'That's never been so in the United States, and many are concerned about the way in which President Trump is acting the way authoritarian rulers do.'
Whether the troops deployed to Los Angeles in June amid the federal immigration raids were used for domestic law enforcement in violation of the Posse Comitatus Act is central in the trial underway this week in federal court in San Francisco.
If Trump were to send troops to California, Banks said, the only legal lever he could pull would be to declare an insurrection and invoke the Insurrection Act.
Unlike in D.C., Trump wouldn't be able to federalize police departments in other parts of the country. There are circumstances where the federal government has put departments under consent decrees — a reform tool for agencies that have engaged in unlawful practices — but in those cases the government alleged specific civil rights violations, said Ed Obayashi, a Northern California sheriff's deputy and legal counsel on policing.
'You are not going to be able to come in and take over because you say crime is rising in a particular place,' he said.
Oakland Councilman Ken Houston, a third-generation resident who was elected in 2024, said his city doesn't need the federal government's help with public safety.
Oakland has struggled with crime for years, but Houston cited progress. Violent crimes, including homicide, aggravated assault, rape and robbery are down 29% so far this year from the same period in 2024. Property crimes including burglary, motor vehicle theft and larceny also are trending down, according to city data.
'He's going by old numbers and he's making a point,' Houston said of Trump. 'Oakland does not need the National Guard.'
Times staff writer Noah Goldberg contributed to this report.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

U.S. Senator Hawley launches probe into Meta AI policies
U.S. Senator Hawley launches probe into Meta AI policies

Yahoo

time3 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

U.S. Senator Hawley launches probe into Meta AI policies

By Jody Godoy (Reuters) -U.S. Senator Josh Hawley launched a probe into Facebook parent Meta Platforms' artificial intelligence policies on Friday, demanding documents on rules that had allowed its artificial intelligence chatbots to 'engage a child in conversations that are romantic or sensual.' Both Democrats and Republicans in Congress have expressed alarm over the rules outlined in an internal Meta document first reported by Reuters on Thursday. Hawley, a Republican from Missouri, chairs the Senate subcommittee on crime and counterterrorism, which will investigate "whether Meta's generative-AI products enable exploitation, deception, or other criminal harms to children, and whether Meta misled the public or regulators about its safeguards," he said in a letter to Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg. "We intend to learn who approved these policies, how long they were in effect, and what Meta has done to stop this conduct going forward," Hawley said. Meta declined to comment on Hawley's letter on Friday. The company said previously that "the examples and notes in question were and are erroneous and inconsistent with our policies, and have been removed.' In addition to documents outlining those changes and who authorized them, Hawley sought earlier drafts of the policies along with internal risk reports, including on minors and in-person meetups. Reuters reported on Thursday about a retired man who died while traveling to New York on the invitation of a Meta chatbot. Meta must also disclose what it has told regulators about its generative AI protections for young users or limits on medical advice, according to Hawley's letter. Hawley has often criticized Big Tech. He held a hearing in April on Meta's alleged attempts to gain access to the Chinese market which were referenced in a book by former Facebook executive Sarah Wynn-Williams.

Draft of major MAHA report calls for more education, less regulation — and offers few policies
Draft of major MAHA report calls for more education, less regulation — and offers few policies

Boston Globe

time4 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Draft of major MAHA report calls for more education, less regulation — and offers few policies

While the document, titled 'Make Our Children Healthy Again Strategy,' retreads key MAHA ground like the need to cut artificial food dyes and encourage physical activity, it also offers a more expansive view of where Kennedy plans to steer his agency. Details of the report, which was delivered to the White House on Tuesday but not made public, were first published by The New York Times. They have yet to be authenticated by White House officials. Childhood vaccine schedule reform is on the agenda, though the report offers no details on how Kennedy will change the list of recommended childhood vaccines, if at all. He has for years cast suspicion on vaccines, often citing flawed research, and promoted the idea that early shots are harming children. The report similarly calls for 'addressing vaccine injuries.' Advertisement 'Together, this strategy will translate the work of the MAHA movement to policies that make a transformative and lasting impact for Americans and end the childhood chronic disease crisis,' says a draft document, dated Aug. 11 and published by Politico. Advertisement The strategy notably avoids mention of the 'This report has one overriding implied message: More research needed,' Marion Nestle, a leading nutrition researcher and professor emeritus at New York University, said via email. But, she said, 'we already know the problems. It's way past time to start addressing them.' Perhaps the most forceful regulatory proposals in the report have to do with marketing. One recommends the Health and Human Services Department work with other federal agencies to enforce direct-to-consumer advertising of prescription drugs, including among social media influencers and telehealth companies. The move falls short of the full ban Kennedy previously talked about. A separate recommendation would create new industry guidelines to 'limit the direct marketing of certain unhealthy foods to children,' though it seems those rules would still be voluntary. (Some of the largest food and beverage companies currently self-regulate under a 'Though still light on specifics, these draft recommendations are a bit of a mixed bag,' said Andrew Binovi, director of government affairs for the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine. Advertisement Among the ideas is Nestle says the first Trump administration tried to implement a similar plan with pre-packed food boxes distributed through food banks and other organizations, which was 'a disaster for small farmers initially recruited to do these labor intensive and perishable boxes. It makes much more sense to make sure people have enough money to buy food.' Trump's recent tax cut bill The report also suggests the government should incentivize more breastfeeding, either through the WIC program or other routes. There is little mention of ultra-processed foods, or UPFs, which are expected to be a focus of the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, due later this year. HHS is also crafting a definition of what constitutes a UPF.'It appears that big food lobbyists have been busy and successful,' said Jerold Mande, CEO of the nutrition nonprofit Nourish Science, who previously held senior policymaking roles at the FDA and USDA under the George H.W. Bush, Clinton, and Obama administrations. 'Who expected the MAHA report to do more to get whole milk in schools than to get UPF out?'The report also says that the USDA will 'prioritize precision nutrition research,' a line of research that aims to provide people with more personalized recommendations by taking into account their body's individual needs and responses to certain foods. Former NIH nutrition researcher Kevin Hall Advertisement The draft report is 'the most ambitious federal plan yet to confront childhood chronic disease,' said Marty Irby, president and CEO at Capitol South and Competitive Markets Action, who previously lobbied for ranchers and farmers. 'Still, there are gaps: the USDA school lunch program continues to force dairy on many children — particularly kids of color — who are lactose intolerant, with little to no alternatives, and the plan offers little to promote local, farm-to-table food in schools.' Aviva Musicus, science director for the Center for Science in the Public Interest, criticized the report as embodying 'the idiosyncratic beliefs' of one person, Kennedy. 'He might be right about food dyes, but the report's recommendations to alter our vaccine framework, restructure government agencies, and promote meat and whole milk are going to promote disease, not health,' Musicus said. While the draft report is not a budget document, it is unclear how much funding would be needed for the various efforts or where it would come from. Already, Congress Advertisement Many of the proposals involve Medicaid, WIC, Instead of regulation, the administration plans to run public awareness and education campaigns aimed at adolescents about physical fitness, screen time, substance use, vaping and 'root cause issues that impact adult infertility.' Another initiative aims to train school and library workers on how to handle overdoses, and expand their access to the overdose-reversal medication Narcan, per the report. States will be encouraged to re-adopt the Presidential Fitness Test, which grades students on their ability to do things such as complete a mile run. HHS will also establish an 'infertility training center,' though the report offers limited details on precisely what services would be offered at such a facility. (Kennedy allies have been pushing for widespread use of what's called Medical schools, which have already been pushed by the administration to Advertisement Elsewhere in the department, National Institutes of Health officials plan to launch two new offices, one focused on developing alternatives to animal testing, such as organ-on-a-chip technologies, and another to organize chronic disease research. NIH will also start a new task force on children's health, and create a database of researchers' funding sources, similar to the OpenPayments system run by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, per the draft report. The commission's recommendations, while largely centered at Kennedy's HHS, also affect the USDA and the Environmental Protection Agency — though not as severely as some in the food and agriculture industries feared. Unlike While calling for more 'innovative growing solutions,' the report also says the government ought to 'ensure that the public has awareness and confidence in EPA's robust pesticide review procedures.' When it comes to air quality — a 'The commission has a historic opportunity to protect America's kids, but only if it resists corporate influence and turns bold ideas into real, accountable action,' Irby told STAT. Here are other highlights from the document: Mental health: More prior authorization Pediatric mental health remains a key focus for Kennedy and his MAHA allies. In February, a White House executive order called mood stabilizers and antipsychotic drugs a ' The draft echoes this language, highlighting the overmedicalization of children as a key challenge to overcome and calling for HHS to form a working group that will evaluate prescription patterns for SSRIs, antipsychotics, stimulants, and other drugs that children take. They also ask the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to work with states to increase prior authorization requirements and tighten prescribing safeguards particularly for ADHD. The draft says the Veterans Administration will provide NIH with de-identifiable data on ADHD, diabetes, and pharmaceutical usage among spouses, dependents and survivors of veterans under 18. It's true that kids can be overmedicalized, said Jennifer Mathis, deputy director for the Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law. But it was 'disheartening, however, that the leaked draft strategy makes no mention of well-established services that are critical for children with significant mental health needs, such as intensive care coordination, intensive behavior support, and mobile crisis services,' Mathis said. Rates of anxiety, depression and ADHD in the U.S. are increasing, but the scientific explanation for their rise is Although the scientific literature on screen use offers Notably absent from the report, however, was the startling rise of youth suicide over the last two decades. Suicide is one of the leading causes of deaths in this demographic and is particularly pronounced among Black teenagers. One in five high school students Fluoride: New scrutiny of water standards In discussing the importance of water quality, the document focuses on one element: fluoride. The document does not directly name other contaminants, like PFAS or lead. The report states that the CDC and USDA will 'educate Americans on the appropriate levels of fluoride, clarify the role of EPA in drinking water standards for fluoride under the Safe Drinking Water Act, and increase awareness of the ability to obtain fluoride topically through toothpaste,' Experts largely agree that fluoridation at the level currently recommended by the CDC is safe, despite some growing concern that higher levels of fluoride intake could be The draft of the report also states the FDA will evaluate liquid drops and tablets. This process has already begun, with a Electromagnetic radiation: Studies ahead The report also says HHS plans to study electromagnetic radiation and health research 'to identify gaps in knowledge, including on new technologies to ensure safety and efficacy.' The report doesn't explain what sources of electromagnetic radiation its authors consider possible cause for concern. But Kennedy has claimed — contrary to scientific consensus — on The But while there's not evidence of a link between cell phones and cancer, it's true that the devices have changed dramatically since the advent of smartphones and that kids' usage has skyrocketed, said Emanuela Taioli, director of the Institute for Translational Epidemiology at Mount Sinai's Icahn School of Medicine, via email. 'Perhaps a new study on kids specifically is worth doing.' Daniel Payne and Chelsea Cirruzzo contributed reporting. If you or someone you know may be considering suicide, contact the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: Call or text 988 or chat . For TTY users: Use your preferred relay service or dial 711 then 988.

New R.I. Air National Guard headquarters in Quonset ‘improves our readiness'
New R.I. Air National Guard headquarters in Quonset ‘improves our readiness'

Boston Globe

time4 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

New R.I. Air National Guard headquarters in Quonset ‘improves our readiness'

Plans to finally replace the complex moved forward after US Senator Jack Reed Advertisement 'We stepped up from an 84-year-old building, which was showing a little wear and tear, to the most modern facility that we have,' Reed said at a ribbon cutting ceremony at the Quonset Air National Guard Base in North Kingstown. Get Rhode Map A weekday briefing from veteran Rhode Island reporters, focused on the things that matter most in the Ocean State. Enter Email Sign Up 'This building is going to improve professionalism,' the Democratic senator added. 'It's going to inspire, I think, the air men and air women that work here, because they're working in the best facilities.' The new, 43,000-square-foot headquarters – with offices, medical facilities, and a dining and multi-purpose area – will serve as central command for 143d Airlift Wing, and as an emergency operations center for Rhode Island in the event of a natural disaster or other crisis, according to officials. The Rhode Island Air National Guard employs approximately 1,100 military and civilian personnel, including pilots, maintenance, operation, and support personnel, officials said. Advertisement Major General Andrew J. Chevalier, 'In an ever-increasing, challenging, strategic environment with an increasing role of the National Guard in both our state and federal missions, it is imperative that we take a long look into the future to ensure that we are ready and equipped to deploy and win when called,' Chevalier said. 'This building is an investment to help us do that.' From left, US Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, US Senator Jack Reed, Rhode Island Governor Dan McGee, and Colonel Adam Wiggins, commander of the 143rd Airlift Wing, listen to guest speakers during a ribbon cutting ceremony, Friday. MARK STOCKWELL FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE Dating back to 1915, the 143d Airlift Wing operates a fleet of C-130J Super Hercules, aircraft that is 'capable of operating from rough, dirt strips and is the prime transport for air dropping troops and equipment into hostile areas,' according to its During the Global War on Terror, 143d Airlift Wing has provided 'a bridge to and from' combat theaters, the website states. US Representative Seth Magaziner touted on Friday how the unit was 'famously one of the most deployed to Afghanistan in the entire country.' The 143d is also called upon for peacekeeping and humanitarian aid missions across the United States and around the world, he said. 'If you all keep showing up for our country and doing your job, we will keep showing up for you,' Magaziner, a Democrat, told service members. Next week, Magaziner plans to file a bill with US Representative Trent Kelly, a Mississippi Republican, that, if approved, will fix 'a glitch' in the Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program for members of the National Guard and US Army Reserve, he said. Advertisement Currently, those members can only count time spent on active duty toward qualifying for loan forgiveness – not time spent on temporary assignments and completing other duties, including training, according to Magaziner. The bill, which came from a suggestion by a veteran of the Rhode Island National Guard, would change that, Magaziner said. 'That is one small example of a way that we can take your feedback to make sure that you are given what you are owed and what you have earned,' he told service members on Friday. Members of the Rhode Island 143rd Airlift Wing listen to guest speakers during a ribbon cutting ceremony, Friday, celebrating the opening of a new, $46 million facility that will serve as a state-of-the-art command center at the Quonset Air National Guard Base. MARK STOCKWELL FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE Christopher Gavin can be reached at

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store