Tag: Washington D.C.

  • Trump Pushes for Extended DC Police Control Beyond 30-Day Limit

    Trump Pushes for Extended DC Police Control Beyond 30-Day Limit

    WASHINGTON—President Donald Trump has said federal control over Washington’s Metropolitan Police Department should last more than 30 days.

    “We’re going to be asking for extensions on that—long-term extensions,” the president told reporters on Aug. 13 at the Kennedy Center.

    Under the District of Columbia Home Rule Act of 1973, the president can declare an emergency and take over the police department in the nation’s capital city for two days. He can prolong that for 30 days by notifying Congress.

    For the emergency to be extended further, Congress must give the go-ahead. That effort could face a filibuster from Democrats in the Senate.

    On X, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) called the takeover “a political ploy and attempted distraction.”

    Trump also floated declaring a national emergency, suggesting it might enable him to sidestep the D.C. Home Rule Act’s limitations if Congress does not act.

    “I don’t want to call a national emergency. If I have to, I will, but I think the Republicans in Congress will approve this pretty much unanimously,” he said.

    The House and the Senate, which are both under Republican control, are in recess until early September. That’s within 30 days of when Trump first declared a crime emergency to restore safety in Washington on Aug. 11.

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    National Guard troops are deployed to the Washington Monument as part of President Donald Trump’s mobilization of law enforcement in Washington on Aug. 12, 2025. © Andrew Leyden/Getty Images

    Trump has also activated the National Guard to assist the federalized police in combating crime. Those troops started arriving in the city on Aug. 12.

    House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) has praised the president’s takeover, writing on X, “House Republicans support this effort to clean up Washington, end the crime wave, and restore the beauty of the greatest capital in the world.”

    “President Trump is rightly using executive power to take bold and necessary action to crack down on crime and restore law and order in Washington, D.C.,” Rep. James Comer (R-Ky.), who chairs the House Committee on Oversight and Reform, which has jurisdiction over the District of Columbia, said in a statement on Aug. 11.

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    Look Who James Comer Thinks Is Part of the Deep State Now. © Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

    Comer has also announced that the committee would hold a hearing involving D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser and other local officials next month.

    In the upper chamber, the Senate’s Homeland Security Committee has jurisdiction over the District of Columbia.

    The NY Budgets also reached out to that committee’s chair, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), for comment on the president’s request but did not receive a response by publication time.

    Trump also told a reporter he hopes to advance new crime legislation.

    “It’s going to pertain initially to D.C.,” he said.

    Rep. Byron Donalds (R-Fla.) reintroduced the D.C. Criminal Reforms to Immediately Make Everyone Safe (CRIMES) Act in Congress on Aug. 8.

    The legislation would not permit offenders older than 18 to be charged as youth offenders. That category now extends to individuals as old as 24.

    The D.C. CRIMES Act would also create a website to track juvenile crime in the city and prevent the district’s city council from altering criminal liability sentences.

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    Rep. Byron Donalds, R-Fla., came under criticism from Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ presidential campaign Wednesday after he pushed back against the state’s new Black history standards. © Tom Williams / CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images file

    In 2024, a previous version of the D.C. CRIMES Act passed the GOP-controlled House 225–181, netting the support of all Republicans and 18 Democrats.

    It died in a committee in the Senate, which was at that time controlled by Democrats.

  • Trump appoints Jeanine Pirro, a Fox News host, as the temporary U.S. attorney for Washington, D.C.

    Trump appoints Jeanine Pirro, a Fox News host, as the temporary U.S. attorney for Washington, D.C.

    President Donald Trump on Thursday said he is appointing Jeanine Pirro — a Fox News host whose misstatements about the 2020 election were cited in two defamation lawsuits against the network — as the interim U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia.

    Pirro, a former New York judge and district attorney, is to replace Ed Martin, Trump’s initial nominee as D.C.’s top prosecutor who has spent 15 tumultuous weeks in office. Trump, in a Truth Social post, described Pirro as “incredibly well qualified for this position.”

    Brash and often blunt-spoken, Pirro has stood out among a stable of conservative Fox commentators as a passionate defender of Trump, whom she got to know during his years as a developer in New York.

    Her false statements about the 2020 election were cited as evidence during the Dominion Voting System’s litigation against Fox that resulted in the network paying a $787.5 million settlement in 2023.

    An episode of her show after the election “was cancelled because executives were worried about her discussing conspiracy theories,” the Delaware judge overseeing the case concluded.

    Pirro is currently a defendant in the $2.7 billion defamation lawsuit filed against Fox by another voting technology company, Smartmatic. That case could go to trial later this year in New York.

    Michael Caputo, an adviser to Martin and a former Trump strategist, said that the president’s ties to Pirro are rooted in New York, where they traveled in high-level GOP circles.

    “Once when I was with the president and she walked up, it was almost like they were from the same block,” Caputo said during a phone interview. “She’s a force of nature.”

    But Caputo also predicted that Pirro’s history as a commentator would be fodder for rigorous scrutiny from Democrats if Trump seeks to nominate her as the U.S. attorney.

    “There’s lots of material,” Caputo said.

    The president did not specify the duration of Pirro’s term, nor when he would nominate a permanent successor to lead the nation’s largest U.S. attorney’s office, and among its most important. The office has more than 350 prosecutors and unique authority to prosecute both local and federal crimes in the nation’s capital, as well as public corruption, national security and other sensitive matters in the seat of the federal government.

    Before beginning her television career, Pirro served as a judge in Westchester County in New York in the early 1990s, earning the “Judge Jeanine” moniker that is still a central part of her on-screen appeal. She was elected district attorney of Westchester County in 1993, a role she held until 2005. She ran a short-lived campaign for the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate in 2006, hoping to take on then-Sen. Hillary Clinton, but dropped out amid pressure from her party.

    Pirro joined Fox News as a legal analyst in 2006 and began hosting her own show on Saturday nights, “Justice with Judge Jeanine,” five years later. In 2022, she became a co-host of the conservative-leaning talk show “The Five,” offering her a daily presence on the network.

    Anchor Bret Baier was the one to break the newsof Pirro’s appointment to Fox viewerson Thursday. “She will be leaving Fox to take this position,” he said on-air. “We obviously wish her well.” (An hour earlier, Pirro did not appear on her daily Fox show as usual.)

    A Fox News spokesperson said that Pirro’s departure from the network is effective immediately.

    “Jeanine Pirro has been a wonderful addition to The Five over the last three years and a longtime beloved host across FOX News Media who contributed greatly to our success throughout her 14-year tenure,” a Fox spokesperson said.

    Pirro has long described herself a friend of the Trump family, and wrote in her 2018 book “Liars, Leakers and Liberals about joining them on flights back to Florida, recounting an incident in which she made Eric Trump queasy after taking a turn in the cockpit.

    She also wrote that Trump liked to promote her before she became a television personality, describing how when they would encounter police officers and construction workers on New York streets he would “point to me and say, ‘You know who this is? It’s Jeanine Pirro! She’s the D.A. from Westchester!’ ”

    At the end of Trump’s first term, Trump pardoned Pirro’s ex-husband, Albert J. Pirro Jr.,an attorney who had been convicted on tax evasion charges when she was district attorney. Trump had hired Albert Pirro during the 1990s to represent him in a deal in which he sought to turn an estate into a golf course in Westchester.

    Pirro has long been mentioned as a potential Trump appointee because of her loyalty to him and prominent role in the conservative media ecosystem. In 2018, she denied she was under consideration for the Supreme Court, although she acknowledged in an appearance on ABC’s “The View” that she spoke with Trump “quite often.”

    Around the same time, Politico reported that Pirro had lobbied to serve as Trump’s attorney general. This past January, Pirro denied that she would accept a role in the second Trump administration, after his director of presidential personnel, Sergio Gor, seemed to suggest she would do so during an inauguration weekend ball. Gor had been joking, Pirro said through a Fox News spokesperson.

    Pirro’s Fox News career ran into trouble in 2019 when, she said, she was suspended by the network for incendiary comments about Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minnesota). Trump came to her defense at the time, writing “Bring back @JudgeJeanine Pirro” on Twitter.

    Pirro is only the latest Fox News employee — and the third full-time host after Pete Hegseth and Sean P. Duffy — to get appointed to Trump’s administration, leaving the network with several holes to fill.

    So far, at least 20 current or former Fox employees have accepted roles. Trump has also appointed three current Fox employees to roles that did not require them to leave their jobs at the network. Weekend host Mark Levin was named to the Homeland Security Advisory Council, and hosts Laura Ingraham and Maria Bartiromo were appointed to the board of the Kennedy Center.