President Donald Trump's deployment of the National Guard to Los Angeles to stop protests against his immigration crackdown isn't the first time an elected U.S. official has sent troops to thwart unrest over civil rights.
But National Guard troops are typically deployed — for a variety of emergencies and natural disasters — with the permission of governors in responding states. Trump, a Republican, sent about 1,000 California National Guard troops to Los Angeles despite the objections of California Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, both Democrats.
Confrontations began Friday when dozens of protesters gathered outside a federal detention center demanding the release of more than 40 people arrested by federal immigration authorities across Los Angeles as part of Trump's mass deportation campaign.
Trump said he had to federalize the troops to ''address the lawlessness'' in California. Newsom said Trump's order was a ''complete overreaction" that was ''purposely inflammatory and will only escalate tensions."
Some previous National Guard deployments have restored peace after violent crackdowns from local law enforcement or vigilante violence, but sometimes troops have intensified tensions in communities and with people who were protesting for civil rights or racial equality.
''The people's right to peacefully exercise their collective power and challenge this administration's unjust policies targeting Black and Brown communities must be protected,'' leaders of eight legacy civil rights groups, including the NAACP, the National Action Network and the Legal Defense Fund, said in a statement Monday.
At the Movement for Black Lives, a coalition of racial justice organizations, Amara Enyia expressed concern that the federal troop deployment could result in disproportionate arrests and more severe charges for the Black protestors, as was true during protests in 2020 following the murder of George Floyd.
Both military and police officers will have an ''everything is a target'' mentality, said Enyia, who is co-executive director of the coalition's programs, campaigns and policy work.