WASHINGTON; U.S. President Donald Trump announced on Monday that he is deploying 800 National Guard troops to Washington, D.C., and temporarily taking control of the cityās police department ā an extraordinary use of presidential authority that bypasses the capitalās elected leadership.
Framing the move as a measure to ārescueā the city from a supposed surge in violence, Trump claimed Washington had been āovertaken by violent gangs and bloodthirsty criminals,ā despite data showing violent crime has been steadily declining after a spike in 2023.
This marks the second time this summer Trump has sent troops into a Democrat-led city. A federal trial is already underway in San Francisco to determine whether his June deployment of National Guard troops to Los Angeles, without California Governor Gavin Newsomās approval, violated U.S. law. Trump also suggested similar action could follow in other cities like Chicago.
Hundreds of federal officers from more than a dozen agencies have already been deployed in Washington, with Attorney General Pam Bondi now overseeing the police force. The U.S. Army said the Guardās role will include administrative support, logistics, and maintaining a law enforcement presence, with up to 200 troops active at a time.
Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser disputed Trumpās claims of rampant crime, highlighting that violent crime fell 35% in 2024 and is down an additional 26% so far in 2025, reaching the lowest level in over three decades. While she acknowledged the presidentās broad emergency powers under the Districtās Home Rule Act, the cityās attorney general, Brian Schwalb, labeled the move āunlawfulā and said legal options were being considered.
Trump invoked a provision in the Home Rule Act allowing the president to take control of the police force for 30 days under āemergencyā conditions. He declared a āpublic safety emergencyā while also promising to clear homeless encampments, though he provided no relocation plan.
The announcement comes despite Trumpās Federal Emergency Management Agency cutting $20 million ā a 44% reduction ā from the National Capital Regionās security budget this year.
The president holds direct command over the 2,700 members of the D.C. National Guard, a power not shared by governors in U.S. states. The Guard has previously been mobilized in the capital, including during the January 6, 2021, Capitol riot and the 2020 police brutality protests.
Sources; Reuters, News Agencies






































































