DC mayor hardens stance on Trump’s ‘authoritarian’ deployment of national guard – US politics live | US news

Published: 2025-08-13 14:13:49 | Views: 7


DC mayor Bowser hardens stance on Trump, calls deployment of national guard an 'authoritarian push'

Muriel Bowser last night hardened her stance on Donald Trump using federal agents to police the city, calling the president’s move an “authoritarian push”.

Speaking during a live town hall on social media, the mayor of Washington DC urged community members to “protect our city, to protect our autonomy, to protect our home rule and get to the other side of this guy and make sure we elect a Democratic House so that we have a backstop to this authoritarian push”.

“We are not 700,000 scumbags and punks,” she added. “We don’t have neighborhoods that should be bulldozed. We have to be clear about our story, who we are and what we want for our city.”

Mayor Bowser holds a press conference in Washington, DC.
Mayor Bowser holds a press conference in Washington DC. Photograph: Annabelle Gordon/Reuters

Bowser had previously pledged to work “side with side” with the federal officials Trump has tasked with overseeing the city’s law enforcement, while insisting the police chief remained in charge of the department and its officers.

Speaking on Tuesday after a meeting with Pam Bondi, the attorney general, Bowser told reporters: “What I’m focused on is the federal surge and how to make the most of the additional officer support that we have.”

National Guard troops are deployed to the Washington Monument as part of president Trump’s mobilization of law enforcement on 12 August, 2025 in Washington, DC.
National guard troops are deployed to the Washington Monument as part of president Trump’s mobilization of law enforcement on 12 August 2025 in Washington DC. Photograph: Andrew Leyden/Getty Images

About 850 officers and agents took part in a “massive law enforcement surge” across Washington DC on Monday night and made nearly two dozen arrests, the White House has said. The violent crime rate in Washington DC is at a 30-year low.

Trump’s intervention has been widely condemned as an authoritarian power grab that undermines the autonomy of Washington’s DC local government and seeks to distract attention from political problems such as the Jeffrey Epstein files.

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Key events

Stephen Starr
Stephen Starr

Rural communities are seeing a key aspect of life affected amid Trump’s immigration crackdown and Ice raids.

Harrisonburg, Virginia, a town of 50,000 people in the Shenandoah Valley, should have been alive with the color, sound and smells of local Latino culture. Soccer tournaments, taco trucks, Salvadorian chanchona musical bands and about 4,000 visitors were last month set to attend the town’s Hispanic Festival held at a sports complex outside the town.

But this year, it’s not happening.

US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) agents have been active in the Harrisonburg area for months, prompting organizers to cancel the festival.

“There have been instances of raids targeting immigrant families and workplaces in the past. While we had no confirmed reports that Ice planned to target the festival, the general climate of fear is very real,” says Crimson Solano, executive director of the Coalición Solidaria Pro-Inmigrantes Unidos (COSPU), which runs the festival.

“This fear undermines the purpose of the festival, which is to create a safe, celebratory space for our community.”

Festivals and fairs are a mainstay of small-town American life. But now from rural Indiana to a tiny village in Washington state to cornerstone Appalachian towns such as Harrisonburg, Latino and other international festivals are being cancelled this summer due to fears of raids by Ice agents.

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