This is an adapted excerpt from the Aug. 27 episode of “The Beat with Ari Melber.”
As Donald Trump pledges to expand his federal takeover of Washington, D.C., to other Democratic-run cities across America, new polling shows just how unpopular his purported crime crackdown really is. According to a Quinnipiac University national poll released Wednesday, 56% of Americans oppose the president’s decision to send National Guard troops to the nation’s capital.
Before Trump sent in federal troops, violent crime rates in D.C. were already at a 30-year low. While the president used the attempted carjacking of one of his staffers to help justify his crackdown, it’s worth noting that the incident was swiftly handled by the D.C. Metropolitan police.
His justification for a federal law enforcement takeover is not supported by the statistics or the case that helped promote his dangerous abuse of power.
Inside D.C., Trump’s takeover is already taking a toll. While Mayor Muriel Bowser noted that the presence of additional federal law enforcement has resulted in fewer gun crimes, fewer homicides and a reduction in carjackings, she also said the surge has led to a “break in trust between police and community.”








