Radley Balko writes on The Watch:
The Justice Department announced in January that violent crime in Washington, D.C. hit a 30-year low in 2024. So far this year, it’s down an addtional 26 percent. This, in other words, is a curious time for the president to declare that the nation’s capital is a violent cesspool that demands the sort of crime-fighting expertise that only a 79-year-old man who fetishizes dictators and whose entire worldview is perpetually stuck in the 1980s can provide.
The motivation for Donald Trump’s plan to “federalize”
Washington, D.C., is same as his motivation for sending
active-duty troops into Los Angeles, deporting
people to the CECOT torture prison in El Salvador, his politicization of
the Department of Justice, and nearly every other authoritarian overreach of
the last six months: He is testing the limits of his power — and, by extension,
of our democracy. He’s feeling out what the Supreme Court, Congress, and the
public will let him get away with. And so far, he’s been able to do what he
pleases.
The incident that apparently precipitated Trump’s
D.C. crackdown was entirely pretextual. It wasn’t the overall amount of violent
crime, it was that the wrong person had fallen victim to it. Both Trump and
Elon Musk declared D.C. to be a crime-infested wasteland after photos emerged
of Edward “Big Balls” Coristine, formerly of the so-called Department of
Government Efficiency, beaten and bloodied from an alleged carjacking. The
attackers ran off when a Metro police officer arrived on the scene — which is far
more protection than crime victims usually get from law enforcement.
In response, Trump raged on social media over the
weekend. He immediately sent hundreds of agents from the FBI, Department
of Homeland Security Investigations, and Immigration and Customs
Enforcement into the city (who then responded to
a fender bender as if someone had detonated a dirty bomb.)
Trump is now deploying hundreds of National Guard
troops to the city too. While state National Guards report to governors, the
D.C. National Guard reports to the president. The federal government also has
jurisdiction over Washington. Oversight power is supposed to lie with Congress,
not the president. But this Congress has essentially dissolved itself into
Trump’s agenda.
These legal
distinctions mean that Trump’s “federalization” of D.C. isn’t quite as
extraordinary a power grab as his deployment of
Marines and National Guard troops to Los Angeles in June. But as he made clear
at an unhinged
press conference on Monday, Trump himself is either unaware of that
distinction or doesn’t acknowledge it. He vowed to send troops into Oakland,
Baltimore, and New York as well.
But as with Washington and Los Angeles, violent
crime in Oakland and Baltimore has fallen dramatically this year. New York,
meanwhile, remains one of the safest big cities in the country, despite what
the trembling cowards on Fox News may tell you.
There
was no emergency in Los Angeles, either. With the aid of the
right-wing media bubble, the administration exploited a couple incidents of
property destruction with a surge in peaceful protests against the
administration’s immigration
raids to depict the city as a dystopian hellscape.
The important thing Trump learned from Los Angeles
is that the federal courts failed to intervene. While the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the 9th Circuit ruled that a president’s decision to federalize the
National Guard over the objections of a state governor is reviewable by federal
courts, the court also took at face value Trump’s claim that the protests
presented a threat to immigration enforcement.
There’s little evidence that this was true. But more
importantly, that was never the real reason Trump cracked down on the city. As
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, Trump himself, and internal documents
made clear, the real reason was to intimidate protesters, terrify
immigrant communities and their advocates, and “liberate”
blue cities and states from the “socialists” elected to office. It was
a projection of power.
If this were all truly motivated by Trump’s deep commitment to fighting crime, he wouldn’t have cut security funding to D.C. by 44 percent. (I’m dubious of the link between such funding and crime rates, but the important thing here is that Trump thinks they’re linked.) If it were truly about crime, he wouldn’t have released a convicted triple murder on the streets of Orlando. If it were truly about crime, he wouldn’t have hired a man who told his fellow January 6th protesters to kill the Capitol police to a top-level position at the Justice Department. It this were about crime, Trump would have said something — anything — about the shooter who fired 150 rounds into the Center for Disease Control building in Atlanta.
This is about projecting power. Trump has long
disparaged cities with large Black populations and Black leadership. New York,
D.C., Baltimore, Oakland, and Los Angeles are all cities with large Black
populations who are run by Black Democrats. The front-runner to be the new
mayor of New York is a Muslim
Democratic socialist. Trump isn’t planning to “protect” the residents of
these cities from crime. He’s planning to impose his will on them.
The crackdown in D.C. comes 10 days after the
New Republic reported on a Pentagon memo authored by Phil Hegseth, the
Defense Secretary’s brother, laying out the administration’s plans to deploy
active-duty troops around the country to aid in immigration enforcement “for
years to come.” The Washington Post then reported just today that the Pentagon
has developed a plan for a “reaction force” of National Guard troops Trump can
deploy to any city on a moment’s notice.
These policies would end once and for all this
country’s centuries-old tradition of keeping the military out of routine
domestic law enforcement, it would eradicate one of the cornerstone principles
that drove the American Revolution, and it could well end with U.S. soldiers
firing their guns at U.S. citizens. (If you’re wondering what — other than
being the brother of the least qualified person ever to lead a Cabinet-level agency
— makes Phil Hegseth qualified to plan and implement a policy that would
fundamentally alter the relationship between America and its military, the
answer is apparently that he once
started a podcasting company.)
Tough-on-crime politicians have long used
Washington, D.C., and its residents as
political pawns rather than real Americans with real constitutional
rights. When Richard Nixon was pushing a crime bill that would make the D.C.
the test city for his crime policies in 1970, his Justice Department suppressed
statistics showing that crime in the city had been falling for five months.
They needed people to fear the capital to get the bill through Congress. The
bill passed, but D.C.’s progressive police chief at the time refused to
implement policies like no-knock raids, preventative detention, and aggressive
crackdowns on protest. Crime would continue to fall in D.C. even as it rose in
the rest of the country.
In 1989, in his first televised speech as president,
George H.W. Bush held
up a bag of crack cocaine that he claimed had been seized by the Drug
Enforcement Administration in Lafayette Park, just a few blocks from the White
House. It had not. It hadn’t even been “seized.” Undercover agents from the DEA
had persuaded a small-time, 18-year-old drug dealer to sell them crack at the
park so they could give it to the White House for Bush to use in his speech. In
other words, the DEA arranged for an illegal drug sale near the White House
that otherwise wouldn’t have happened solely so Bush could say an illegal drug
sale had just taken place near the White House.
Demonizing Washington, D.C., then, is an old tactic
from an old playbook. But the threat today is uniquely authoritarian and
dangerous. The Nixon and Bush administrations were pushing policies that were
wrongheaded, counterproductive, and in a few cases unconstitutional. But they
weren’t attacks on democracy.
This most certainly is.
The memo reported by the New Republic seeks to
replicate what Trump did in Los Angeles in other cities. It conflates peaceful,
constitutionally protected protest with international crime syndicates and Al
Qaeda or ISIS. And it puts heavy pressure on the Pentagon to scrap Founding-era
principles about the role of a standing army in favor of a military
increasingly directed inward, against U.S. residents and citizens, to do the
president’s bidding.
This is what Trump has always wanted. He has always
expressed his envy of and respect for authoritarians who could sic the military
on protesters and critics.
One of the healthier things about our democracy is
that when politicians have advocated to get the Pentagon more active in
domestic policing, the strongest resistance has
tended to come from the Pentagon itself. It’s long been a core principle in
U.S. military culture that soldiers should not be deployed against their fellow
citizens. It’s a bright red line.
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