Civil Rights Leaders Slam Trump’s DC National Guard Move

Black civil rights leaders and the mayors of several cities on Tuesday denounced the deployment of the National Guard to the nation’s capital to combat crime, calling it “fundamentally grandstanding” and “a federal coup.”

And by suggesting that other cities, also run by Black mayors, may be next, President Donald Trump was “playing the worst game of racially divisive politics,” one rights leader said.

Trump announced Monday that he would deploy 800 guard members to Washington, D.C., suggesting that the same could happen in New York City, Baltimore, Chicago and Oakland, California.

“When you walk down the street, you’re going to see police or you’re going to see FBI agents,” Trump said about Washington on Monday. “And we will bring in the military if it’s needed.”

Marc Morial, president of the National Urban League, said the president’s actions and words were racially polarizing, considering crime rates in these cities are largely declining.

“This is a distraction at a time when these cities deserve credit because crime and violence are down in most American cities right now, and this is trying to distract from that success, and in effect, create a de facto police state in these cities,” Morial told NBC News.

“He’s playing the worst game of racially divisive politics, and that’s all it is,” Morial said.

The Rev. Al Sharpton, the civil rights leader and head of the National Action Network, said in a statement that “the people of Washington, D.C. ‒ especially those living on the streets, who need the most care ‒ will suffer, alongside the core principles of our Democracy.”

And NAACP President Derrick Johnson questioned the declaration of an emergency in D.C., calling it a “federal coup.”

The White House responded to the criticisms in a statement to NBC News: “There is nothing divisive about cracking down on crime in our nation’s capital to make it safer and more beautiful for all residents and visitors from all around the world,” said White House assistant press secretary Taylor Rogers. “Instead of criticizing the President’s lawful actions to Make DC Safe Again, Democrat-run cities plagued by violent crime should focus on cleaning up their own streets. This is why Democrats continue to be so unpopular among everyday Americans — they think the President of the United States cracking down on crime in our nation’s capital is a bad thing.”

Trump federalized the Metropolitan Police Department over the weekend and called the nation’s capital “one of the most dangerous cities in the world.” It followed the fatal shooting of a congressional intern in July and the carjacking of a former Department of Government Efficiency staffer in D.C. last week, resulting in the arrest of two teenagers.

Even with these violent acts, crime in D.C., has been declining for years and is currently at a 30-year low, according to the Justice Department. Nationwide, violent crime has declined, specifically murders, rape, aggravated assault and robbery, according to data released last week by the FBI.

Black Americans are four times more likely to experience homelessness in their lifetimes than white Americans, according to a 2023 study published in the Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities.

The D.C. police union, citing staffing shortages and “mismanagement,” said it supported the federal takeover, but only in a limited, temporary capacity that resulted in a better resourced department.

D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser said Trump’s move, which he had hinted at for months, is “unsettling and unprecedented.” The administration forced the removal of the Black Lives Matter street painting that had been prominent in the city since 2020 by threatening to hold back millions in funding if it remained.

On Monday, Bowser said that the city’s police chief maintains authority over the police force. But Trump said that he had appointed the administrator of the Drug Enforcement Agency, Terry Cole, as the head of the Metropolitan Police Department.

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