LWVUS joined 126 organizations expressing concern with the recent decision by President Trump to assert control over the District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) and to deploy the National Guard throughout the city.
Dear Chairman Comer, Ranking Member Garcia, Chairman Paul, and Ranking Member Peters:
On behalf of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights and the 126 undersigned organizations, we write to express our profound concerns with the recent decision by President Trump to assert control over the District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) and to deploy the National Guard throughout the city. This unprecedented and needless takeover of a local government’s law enforcement mechanisms poses a dire threat to public safety as well as to civil and human rights, not only of the people who live in D.C., but ultimately throughout the entire country.
This administration has proven that it will push every boundary to test for exploitable weakness in Congress and the courts. Given the role of your respective committees in matters affecting our nation’s capital, we urge you to promptly call for hearings into this decision, and to engage in vigorous oversight moving forward.
While President Trump has pointed to several high-profile instances of crime in the District of Columbia, the fact remains that there simply is no “crime emergency.” Violent crime in D.C. fell by 35 percent in 2024 compared to the previous year, and it is now at a 30-year low. One of the key drivers of this decrease has been widespread investments in community-based violence intervention and crisis response, including through COVID recovery dollars and the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act. Until recently, when Congress inexplicably forced D.C. to slash its budget by more than $1 billion, D.C. was also able to utilize its own local tax revenue to address the issue.
In the place of proven strategies aimed at reducing and preventing crime, President Trump’s decision to commandeer the police and fill the streets with National Guard servicemembers – who are not trained to act as police officers – is not simply a matter of political theater and distraction. It also poses a dire threat to longstanding efforts to foster trust between the police and the communities they serve, especially in light of President Trump’s claim that he would allow the police under his command to “do whatever the hell they want,” raising concerns that the civil rights of D.C. residents may be sacrificed in the process.
President Trump has once again declared a false emergency to access executive powers that were not meant to be used as political tools to amass power. It is a terrible precedent that could harm cities, communities, and people well beyond D.C. What he is able to achieve in D.C., he will try to do elsewhere. He has already threatened to do the same in other major cities around the country.
The simple fact is that President Trump is not seriously interested in reducing crime. He is interested in misleading about crime to justify abhorrent practices, including rapid expansion of criminalization, unprecedented abuses by federal law enforcement agents, and dangerous executive power grabs. Time and time again, he has shown that his real goal is to create a police state, as he has repeatedly weaponized law enforcement to quash dissent and to serve his own personal and political ends. For example, since taking office, his administration has:
• Defied court orders;
• Unlawfully punished law firms, private charities, and universities perceived as being hostile to him or his agenda;
• Locked up and tried to deport students simply because they criticized U.S. foreign policy;
• Filed criminal charges against a sitting U.S. representative for trying to engage in oversight of an immigrant detention center;
• Arrested and charged the president of a state chapter of a major labor union while peacefully engaging in protected First Amendment activity;
• Warned that protestors in D.C. were “going to be met with very big force”;
• Violently handcuffed a sitting U.S. senator for merely trying to ask a question at a press conference;
• Carried out senseless and unlawful immigration raids that have terrorized communities, instilled fear in families, and eroded trust in public institutions; and
• Threatened homeless populations in D.C. and elsewhere with arrest, exile, and involuntary commitment.
The federal government should respect the laws and policies of D.C. enacted via its democratically elected government. Instead, D.C. is an easy testing ground for President Trump, because while its residents pay federal taxes and comply with all the other duties of citizenship, they have no vote in Congress and limited control over their own local governance. Given his record to date, it would be naïve to think that President Trump will stop there. We urge you to ensure that our rights under the Constitution and under our federal laws are being fully protected and enforced.