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As the National Guard assembles in Washington, DC, Democrats worry about what city could be next.

Democrats accuse the deployment of being political theatre, citing historical crime rates

Washington Mayor Bowser: deployment to reduce crime will be used

Trump's emergency powers are questioned

Andrew Goudsward, Julia Harte

WASHINGTON, August 12 -

As Democrats expressed concern about the next city to be targeted, a steady stream uniformed soldiers began arriving at the National Guard Headquarters in Washington to begin the deployment.

Democrats have called President Donald Trump’s deployment of an 800-strong force political theater. Democrats claim that Trump has threatened to replicate this move in other large cities. They point to Washington's statistics which show violent crime at historic lows over the last two years. Washington Mayor Muriel bowser tried to put a good spin on the deployment Tuesday. She said she wanted to use extra personnel to reduce crime, despite calling it "unsettling and unparalleled."

She stated that the National Guard will not be able to arrest anyone. Officially, the troops will not carry weapons, but they will keep their standard issue rifles close to hand. Trump will also send 500 federal agents to the city as a supplement during the 30-day deployment.

Rebecca Harkey of Washington, who was out walking with her daughter on Tuesday, admitted that crime made her think about leaving the capital. She said it is "a very active fear" she lives by.

Rodney Miller who has lived in Washington for over 50 years questioned, however, the need for National Guard soldiers given the lower crime rates now.

Data shows that violent crime in the District of Columbia has declined rapidly since 2023, when it peaked. It is now at historic low levels.

In a Monday announcement, the President said that he wanted to rid the city "of violent criminals, roving gangs of wild youths, drugged out maniacs and homeless people."

Monica Hopkins, executive Director of ACLU's D.C. Office, described the National Guard deployment, and the temporary control granted to U.S. attorney general Pam Bondi of the D.C. Metropolitan Police, as "political theatre and a blatantly fake justification for abuses of emergency powers."

The administration used federal law enforcement agents even before the National Guard was deployed to deal with what they deemed a crisis in Washington. White House reported that 850 agents and officers made 23 arrests for charges like homicide or driving under the influence on Monday. They also seized six illegal guns.

Jeanine Pirro is the U.S. Attorney for the capital. She dismissed a question regarding the violence in the city compared to that of other cities. She said, "All I can tell you is that we are ranked in terms of death," at a press conference held on Tuesday. "I don't want any more statistics."

BREAK THE NORMS

Washington's National Guard is directly responsible to the President. In contrast, in the states the National Guard is a militia which reports to the Governor, except for when it is called up into federal service. Rarely are troops used to enforce law and order in the United States. Trump's decision in June to take over California's National Guard as a response to immigration protests marked the first time that National Guard personnel were deployed to respond to unrest in the United States since 1992's Rodney King Riots. Other deployments were in response to disasters and to strengthen border security.

A trial has been started to determine whether Trump's use the troops is legal. This is the first time that the National Guard of a State was federalized, without the governor's consent, since the Civil Rights Era.

When Trump was campaigning for election, he pointed out cities that had large Black populations such as Baltimore and Washington when he talked about urban crime.

Chicago, the city Trump spoke of on Monday, is a long-time hotbed of violent crime. However, it has been significantly reduced in the first six months of this year.

In a Monday statement, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson stated that shootings and homicides had both decreased by 40% over the last year.

Johnson said that if President Trump wanted to make Chicago safer, he could start by releasing funds for programs to combat violence and crime. These programs have been crucial to our efforts to reduce crime and violence. Trump spoke Monday about the crime that occurs in New York City and other cities, which he attributes in part to the elimination of cash bail laws. New York eliminated the requirement that criminals pay a cash bail to be released from jail before a trial for low-level offenses in 2019. Legislators added exceptions, and New York Governor Kathy Hochul worked to restore judges' power to set cash bonds.

Hochul's spokesperson, a Democrat, who sent National Guard troops to New York City's Subway System last year to combat crime, stated that crime rates in the city and state were at records lows.

(source: Reuters)