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More Republican governors send National Guard to Washington, backing Trump

More Republican governors send National Guard to Washington, backing Trump

Japan Times20 hours ago
Hundreds of additional National Guard troops are headed to Washington, D.C., from half a dozen Republican-led states, bolstering U.S. President Donald Trump's extraordinary move to flood the Democratic-led city with soldiers and federal agents in what he claims is an effort to fight violent crime.
The Republican governors of Mississippi, Louisiana and Tennessee agreed to deploy troops to Washington, days after the Republican governors of West Virginia, South Carolina, and Ohio also did so at the Trump administration's request.
Trump has characterized Washington as overrun with violence and homelessness, a description local officials have rejected. Federal and city statistics show violent crime rates have dropped sharply since a spike in 2023, though the city's murder rate remains higher than most other big U.S. cities. The Justice Department has opened an investigation into whether the city manipulated its statistics to make crime rates appear lower, The Washington Post reported, citing unnamed sources.
In a social media post on Monday, Trump wrote, "D.C. gave Fake Crime numbers in order to create a false illusion of safety," without providing evidence. He made similar assertions last week. Trump announced on Aug. 11 he had ordered 800 Guard troops to the city and temporarily taken over its police department, a remarkable exercise of presidential power over the U.S. capital.
A man rides by on an e-scooter as members of the National Guard stand watch outside of Union Station under orders from the Trump administration on Tuesday. |
AFP-JIJI
The federal government also dispatched agents from numerous agencies, including the FBI, to patrol the city's streets. Following a legal challenge filed by the city's attorney general, the administration negotiated a deal with Mayor Muriel Bowser to keep Police Chief Pamela Smith in charge of the department's operations. Trump has threatened similar operations in other Democratic-controlled cities such as Chicago, though he would likely face more legal obstacles than he does in Washington, where the federal government still has broad oversight under U.S. law.
Critics have accused Trump of manufacturing an emergency to seize greater control of Washington and target Democratic cities.
Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry said he had approved the deployment of about 135 Guard soldiers to Washington, while Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves said he had ordered 200 soldiers to the capital. Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee has also deployed 160 Guard troops to the city, according to local media reports.
"Crime is out of control there, and it's clear something must be done to combat it," Reeves said in a statement.
Members of the National Guard at the Metro Center station in Washington, on Tuesday. Trump has threatened to deploy the Guard in other Democratic-controlled cities. |
TIERNEY L. CROSS / THE NEW YORK TIMES
In total, the six Republican states have announced deployments of more than 1,100 Guard troops to Washington.
"The numbers on the ground in the District don't support a thousand people from other states coming to Washington," the mayor told reporters on Monday, adding that the question was "why the military would be deployed in an American city to police Americans."
Guard soldiers, most of whom have civilian jobs and serve part-time, often respond to natural disasters and other emergencies. While the National Guard in Washington reports to the president, governors typically control the Guard in their own states.
Trump tested that authority in June, when he ordered thousands of National Guard troops and active-duty Marines into Los Angeles as protests over his administration's immigration raids flared up. The deployment came despite opposition from California's Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom. A federal judge in San Francisco is weighing whether Trump's actions in Los Angeles were illegal, after California sued the administration.
Federal law generally forbids the use of the military in law enforcement, but there are exceptions, including for National Guard troops that are under state command, such as California's.
A person blows bubbles near members of the National Guard standing watch outside Union Station in Washington on Aug. 14. |
KENT NISHIMURA / THE NEW YORK TIMES
In 2020, during Trump's first administration, the White House requested Guard troops from numerous states to help restore order in Washington in the wake of racial justice protests. Then-Attorney General Bill Barr said the National Guard remained under state command and was used to protect federal buildings and personnel.
Even so, Barr said their duties would include controlling crowds, temporarily detaining people, and conducting "cursory" searches, activities usually associated with police.
Critics said the 2020 experience in Washington potentially opened the way for the president to use armed troops against civilians.
A White House official said on Tuesday that Guard troops in Washington may carry arms but were not making arrests. Instead, the soldiers are protecting federal property and providing "a safe environment for law enforcement officers to make arrests."
Some 465 arrests have been made in the 12 days since the Trump administration's operations began, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi wrote on social media platform X on Tuesday, an average of 39 arrests a day.
The city's Metropolitan Police Department arrested an average of 61 adults and juveniles per day in 2024, according to city statistics.
Dozens of homeless encampments have also been cleared from federal land, according to the White House.
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