It’s National Police Week in the United States, and Donald Trump’s White House team marked the occasion with a straightforward social media message. It read:
This White House will NEVER betray our law enforcement officers. Not now. Not ever. We stand with the brave men and women who risk everything to keep our communities safe.
At face value, that seems like a perfectly inoffensive and anodyne statement for a White House to issue during National Police Week. But this also seems like a good time to note that Trump, like many convicted felons, has a difficult relationship with law enforcement.
On one hand, the president likes at least to pretend to be closely allied with the police. Indeed, the day after his second inaugural, the Republican told reporters, “I am the friend of police.”
On the other hand, Trump has also spent years railing against “dirty cops,” while condemning law enforcement officials he dislikes as, among other things, “fascists.” He has even expressed support for prosecuting members of the Capitol Police, despite the fact that they did nothing wrong.
But Trump’s relationship with law enforcement took an ugly turn for the worse when he issued roughly 1,500 pardons and commuted the sentences of 14 Jan. 6 criminals, including violent felons who were in prison for assaulting police officers.
Some in the law enforcement community, including current and former prosecutors, were understandably appalled by Trump’s decision. As The New York Times reported in January, plenty of police officers — most notably those who served at the Capitol on Jan. 6 — felt the same way.








