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Trump authorizes deployment of an additional 2,000 National Guards to respond to immigration protests in Los Angeles

Jun 10, 2025 | World

June 10, 2025

🔥 Crisis Overview:

  • President Donald Trump has authorized the deployment of 2,000 more National Guard troops to Los Angeles, bringing the total to over 4,100, without a request from California’s governor.

  • The deployment is meant to support ICE operations during mass immigration protests.

⚖️ State Pushback:

  • California Attorney General Rob Bonta and Governor Gavin Newsom have both filed lawsuits against the Trump administration, calling the federalization of the National Guard unlawful and a violation of the 10th Amendment.

  • This is the first known instance in decades where the National Guard has been activated in a state without the governor’s consent.

🧨 Protests Intensify in LA:

  • Demonstrations continued into the night around Little Tokyo and the downtown federal detention center, with flash bangs, fireworks, and projectiles exchanged between protesters and LAPD officers.

  • LAPD has arrested dozens, used 600+ less-lethal rounds, and confirmed injuries to five officers.

🚨 Federal and Local Tensions:

  • 700 U.S. Marines have been sent to LA to assist federal operations—without coordination with LAPD.

  • Police Chief Jim McDonnell criticized the lack of communication, warning this could create operational chaos.

💬 Political Fallout:

  • Mayor Karen Bass condemned the deployment as a “deliberate attempt” to provoke unrest.

  • Trump’s public message to protesters—“IF THEY SPIT, WE WILL HIT”—sparked widespread condemnation, especially in contrast to his pardons of Jan. 6 rioters, many of whom attacked police.

📝 Pentagon’s Role:

  • The Pentagon is drafting rules of engagement for the Marines, explicitly banning warning shots and urging de-escalation unless acting in self-defense.

  • Each Marine will carry a card explaining their limits of authority.

📢 Labor Leader Speaks Out:

  • David Huerta, a prominent labor figure recently released from federal detention, vowed to continue the fight: “We all have to fight for them.”


🚨 Bottom Line:

This marks a rare and potentially unconstitutional use of military force by a sitting U.S. president against domestic protests without state approval. The unfolding situation in Los Angeles is now a flashpoint for broader tensions around immigration, federal authority, and civil liberties.

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