National Guard troops and immigration agents on horseback, clad in green uniforms and tactical gear, trotted into MacArthur Park on Monday, surrounding the iconic square with armored vehicles in a show of force widely denounced as gratuitous. The enforcement operation produced few tangible results that day. But the purpose of the display was unmistakable. |
The Trump administration's monthlong operation in Los Angeles, which began on June 6 with flash raids at work sites and culminated days later with Trump's deployment of Marines and the Guard, continues to pay political dividends to a president who had been in search of the perfect foil on his signature issue since retaking office, officials close to the president told The Times. |
At first, officials in the West Wing thought the operation might last only a week or two. But Trump's team now says the ongoing spectacle has proven a resounding political success with few downsides. Thus far, the administration has managed to fend off initial court challenges, maintain arrests at a steady clip, and generate images of a ruthless crackdown in a liberal bastion that delight the president's supporters. |
It may be premature for the president to declare political victory. Anger over the operation has swelled, prompting activism across California. And signs have emerged that the White House may be misreading Trump's election mandate and the political moment, with new polls showing public sentiment turning nationwide on the president's increasingly aggressive enforcement tactics. |
The city has struggled to cope, hobbled by an unpopular mayor and a nationally divisive governor who have been unable to meaningfully respond to the unprecedented federal effort. But the raids have also provided California's Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom, with an opportunity to fill a leadership vacuum as his party grapples to find its footing in the resistance. |
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Lawsuits could still change the course of the operation. A crucial hearing set for Thursday in a case that could challenge the constitutionality of the operation itself. |
But critics say the pace of litigation has failed to meet the urgency of the moment, just as the president's aides weigh whether to replicate their L.A. experiment elsewhere throughout the country. |
To Trump, a gift that keeps on giving |
Trump has succeeded in the most significant legal case thus far, with the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals allowing him to maintain control of the California National Guard. Troops remain on L.A. streets despite protests that the administration cited to justify their deployment in the first place ending weeks ago. And the administration has put the city on the defensive in a suit over the legality of its sanctuary city policy. |
One White House official told The Times that the administration's aggressive, experimental law enforcement tactics in Los Angeles have proven a "grand success," in part because national media coverage of the ongoing crisis has largely moved on, normalizing what is happening there. |
A spokesperson for the White House said the administration's mission in the city is focused on detaining migrants with violent criminal records, despite reporting by The Times indicating that a majority of individuals arrested in the first weeks of the operation were not convicted criminals. |
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"President Trump is fulfilling his promise to remove dangerous, criminal illegal aliens from American communities — especially sanctuary cities like L.A. that provide safe harbor to criminal illegals and put American citizens at risk," said Abigail Jackson, a White House spokesperson. |
"One month later it's clear, President Trump is doing his job to protect American citizens and federal law enforcement," Jackson added. "But Gavin Newsom and Karen Bass have enabled violent rioters who attacked federal law enforcement, protected violent criminal illegal aliens, and betrayed the trust put in them by the American people." |
Trump's use of Los Angeles as a testing ground to demonstrate raw presidential power has shown his team just how much a unitary executive can get away with. Masked agents snatching migrants has sent a chill through the city and its economy, but there is no end in sight for the operation, with one Homeland Security official telling The Times it would only intensify going forward. |
Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection have arrested nearly 2,800 people in the L.A. area since the crackdown began. |
This week, California Sen. Alex Padilla, a Democrat, introduced a bill with Democratic Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey that would bar immigration officers from wearing masks and require them to display clear identification while on the job. |
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"They wouldn't be saying that if they didn't hate our country," Trump said Wednesday, responding to the legislation, "and they obviously do." |
Trump could still face setbacks |
The 9th Circuit ruling last month, allowing Trump to maintain temporary control over the California National Guard, thwarted momentum for Trump's opponents hoping for a decisive early victory against the operation in federal court. |
But a case brought by the American Civil Liberties Union and joined by the city of Los Angeles, set for arguments in court on Thursday, addresses the core of the raids themselves and could deal a significant policy blow to the Trump administration. The ACLU has found success in another case, over raids conducted earlier this year by Border Patrol in the Central Valley, using similar arguments that claimed its tactics were unconstitutional. |
"It is far too early to say that challenge has been thwarted," said Ahilan Arulanantham, co-director of the Center for Immigration Law and Policy at UCLA School of Law. |
But Arulanantham argued that city and state officials have demonstrated a lack of leadership in the pace of their response to an urgent crisis. |
"There is much more local leaders could be doing to challenge the unlawful actions the federal government is taking against their residents," he added. "The state also could have sued but did not — they sued to challenge the guard deployment, but not the ICE raids themselves." |
The raids have generated favorable coverage for the administration on right-wing media, presenting the crackdown as Trump finally bringing the fight over immigration to the heart of liberal America. But it is unclear whether Americans agree with his tactics. |
Polls released last month from Economist/YouGov and NPR/PBS News/Marist found that while a plurality of Americans still support Trump's overall approach to immigration, a majority believes that ICE has gone too far in its deportation efforts. |
Newsom, speaking this week in South Carolina, a crucial state in the Democratic presidential primary calendar, suggested he saw the president's potential overreach as a political opportunity. |
"They're now raiding the farms," he told a crowd. "Quite literally, federal agents running through the fields." |
The governor told the story of a teenage boy from Oxnard whose parents disappeared in a federal raid, despite having no criminal records, leaving their son helpless and alone. |
"That's America," he said, "Trump's America." |
What else you should be reading |
The must-read: Stephen Miller finally gets his revenge on L.A. The deep dive: Kidnappers or ICE agents? LAPD grapples with surge in calls from concerned citizens The L.A. Times Special: Most nabbed in L.A. raids were men with no criminal conviction, picked up off the street |
More to come, Michael Wilner — Was this newsletter forwarded to you? Sign up here to get it in your inbox. |