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Reading Between the Lines: Trump’s DC Takeover

Posted on August 12, 2025   |   Updated on September 30, 2025
Kaela Cote-Stemmermann

Kaela Cote-Stemmermann

President Trump announced the federal takeover of D.C. police on Aug 11. (The Washington Post/Getty Images)

President Trump announced the federal takeover of D.C. police on Aug 11. (The Washington Post/Getty Images)

President Trump said a lotttt of things at his press conference yesterday when he announced his plan to takeover the local police and deploy the National Guard in D.C. As a resident, it was confusing, panic-inducing, and frustrating. Let's do a little interpreting and explore what this all actually means.

“We will rescue our nation's capital from crime, bloodshed, bedlam, squalor, and worse. This is liberation day in D.C. We’re going to take our capital back.”

Trump consistently called D.C. one of the most dangerous cities in the world, painting the District as a dystopian hellscape with a crisis of “bloodthirsty criminals” and "wild youth.” This rhetoric is nothing new, but it’s not true. Official figures from the Attorney General's office show that violent crime in the city is at a 30-year low. DC Council Chairman Phil Mendelson is calling the announcement a “manufactured intrusion on local authority.”

“This city will no longer be a sanctuary for illegal alien criminals. We will have full seamless cooperation at all levels of law enforcement and deploy officers across the District with an overwhelming presence.”

In June, the House voted to nullify D.C.’s status as a “sanctuary city,” a law which limits its cooperation with the federal immigration officials. If passed by the Senate, D.C. government would be forced to help with immigration enforcement efforts. Separately, Mayor Bowser proposed repealing the sanctuary city law in her 2026 budget proposal, but the D.C. Council shot that down. Now, Trump is hoping to use this federal takeover to force an uptick of ICE arrests.

D.C. residents rally against Trump’s federal takeover downtown on Aug. 11. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

D.C. residents rally against Trump’s federal takeover downtown on Aug. 11. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

“I’m deploying the National Guard to help establish law, order, and public safety in D.C.”

In D.C., the National Guard reports through the secretary of defense to the president himself, giving him leeway to deploy these troops in a different way than states. Trump previously called in the National Guard in June 2020 to help clear Black Lives Matter protesters.

Notably, he did not call on them during Jan. 6, when a mob of his supporters attacked the Capitol. He is also reassigning 120 F.B.I. agents to D.C. and threatened to call in additional military support “if needed.”

“This dire public safety crisis stems directly from the abject failures of the city's local leadership.”

Trump has long had a tumultuous relationship with D.C. leadership, especially its historically liberal council. And despite Bowser’s best attempts to lay low and adopt a centrist approach, it’s clear D.C. won’t be flying under the radar anymore.

The newly confirmed U.S. Attorney for D.C. Jeanine Pirro doubled down, saying “We need to go after the D.C. Council and its absurd laws.” Congress can overturn or modify any legislation passed by the D.C. Council, as well as pass stand-alone laws for D.C.

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