Despite the inconvenient fact that violent crime rates in Washington, D.C., have reached 30-year lows, Donald Trump decided to deploy National Guard troops to D.C. streets and place local police officers under federal control as part of a dramatic and unnecessary power grab.
As part of the rollout of his radical new policy, the president suggested he was standing with law enforcement.
"You knock the hell out of them. It's the only language they understand … you spit and we hit. And they get hit real hard … now they are allowed to do whatever they want" — Trump on the police response to crime in DC
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2025-08-11T14:50:56.398Z
“[Unnamed criminals] fought back against law enforcement last night and they’re not going to be fighting back long because I’ve instructed them and told them whatever happens, you know, they love to spit in the face of the police as the police are standing up there in uniform,” Trump said. “They’re standing and they’re screaming at them, an inch away from their face, and then they start spitting in their face. And I said, ‘You tell them, you spit and we hit,’ and they can hit real hard.”
There was, however, a rather obvious problem with Trump’s chest-thumping rhetoric: For all of his apparent concerns for officers, the president maintained very different standards when it came to Jan. 6 rioters, many of whom did far more than just spit on police officers during violent clashes at the Capitol, but who nevertheless received presidential pardons from the Republican just hours after his second inaugural.
Indeed, Trump’s Justice Department recently hired a Jan. 6 rioter who was literally filmed urging his fellow insurrectionists to “kill” police officers. After this news came to public light, Trump’s DOJ, instead of firing the guy, said about the man who advocated deadly violence against cops, “Jared Wise is a valued member of the Justice Department and we appreciate his contributions to our team.”
Trump: "If you so much as touch or even think about destroying a statue or monument in Washington DC you go to jail for 10 years."
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2025-08-11T15:21:21.776Z
At the same White House press conference on Monday, the president went on to say that those who “so much as touch” key national landmarks in D.C. will “go to jail for 10 years.”
Putting aside the simple fact that Trump can’t simply dictate criminal punishments on the fly, many were also quick to note that the Republican adopted very different standards after Jan. 6 rioters vandalized the U.S. Capitol and did millions of dollars in damage in the process — money the Trump administration doesn’t want the rioters to pay.
It’s striking how frequently this comes up. About a month ago during a briefing, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt declared from her podium, “This administration wants anyone who has ever committed a crime to be held accountable.”








