Protests against Donald Trump and his administration’s arrests of immigrants have spread to more cities, turbocharged by a potentially illegal and certainly historic break from American norms in militarizing law enforcement at largely peaceful protests. According to CNN, Trump is said to have been planning to deploy soldiers on American streets for months, and Los Angeles turned out to be the proving ground. So far, National Guard soldiers have been assisting federal security agents in ongoing raids across the city while largely remaining in the background at demonstrations. (In another potentially illegal escalation, Trump called in 700 Marines to the area.) According to one news report, military family groups have said soldiers there are suffering from low morale and feel they are being politicized. (A separate report from Military.com said soldiers at Fort Bragg who cheered Trump during a recent speech were handpicked for “political leanings and physical appearance.”) Meanwhile, California law enforcement yesterday charged demonstrators on horseback, beating some with wooden batons and firing projectiles, the Associated Press reported. Then on Thursday, six federal security agents grabbed a 52-year-old sitting member of the United States Senate, forcing him out of a press conference by Trump’s homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, as he tried to ask her questions. They forced Senator Alex Padilla to the ground, handcuffed and detained him for some time. Footage of the arrest showed a police officer with his knee on the senator’s back while others held him down or attempted to block journalists from filming. Noem’s staff sought to blame Padilla, but their comments were contradicted by video of the altercation. Police move toward demonstrators protesting immigration raids in Los Angeles. Photographer: Kyle Grillot/Bloomberg California Governor Gavin Newsom, who has emerged as the leader of a growing national resistance to the president’s efforts, called the physical assault by federal agents on a member of Congress “outrageous, dictatorial, and shameful. Trump and his shock troops are out of control.” According to NPR, Noem called what’s happening in Los Angeles a “blueprint” for other American cities. But while the administration’s justification for many of its actions is an alleged immigrant “invasion,” Trump’s handpicked Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff testified Thursday there isn’t one. Nevertheless, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth refused on Thursday to say whether he would obey an order from a federal judge to remove troops from Los Angeles, raising the possibility of illegal military control of American streets. But soon he may have to answer that question, as a federal judge was scheduled to hear arguments on that very matter this afternoon. |