Marines, Los Angeles and Trump
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Phil McGraw, ICE and Trump
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Anti-ICE protests grew around the country as President Trump defended his deployment of the marines and national guard to quell protestor violence. Meanwhile, California’s Democratic governor filed a lawsuit to stop the military from enforcing immigration law.
While Donald Trump is at Fort Bragg, NC talking tough to Army troops right now and tensions in downtown LA between anti-ICE protestors and armed authorities are rising with rubber bullets being fired,
Impact Social data shared with Newsweek showed a plurality—32 percent—of swing voters are responding positively to Trump's response, while 19 percent are responding negatively. Forty-nine percent are responding neutrally to Trump's approach, sharing mostly "emotionless" reaction or news articles about the protests.
Protesters and police are facing off in Los Angeles, and anti-ICE protests have occurred across the country. Follow for live updates
President Trump vowed to replicate aggressive immigration enforcement nationwide, sparking protests and legal challenges, particularly in Los Angeles.
4hon MSN
Louisiana Sen. Kennedy criticizes Democrats over anti-ICE riots, calling for federal intervention as Gov. Newsom and Mayor Bass push back against Trump administration actions
President Donald Trump has deployed 4,000 National Guardsmen and 700 Marines to LA. But California Gov. Gavin Newsom and California Attorney General Rob Bonta are suing the Trump administration, saying they unlawfully "trampled over" California’s sovereignty when they federalized the California National Guard.
Marines and additional National Guard troops headed to the Los Angeles area on Tuesday, sent in by President Donald Trump in response to protests over immigration raids despite the objections of