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.
"It is a very frightening proposition, one that does not bode well for the rights of people in this country,” she said.
On rare occasion, presidents have invoked an 18th-century wartime law called the Insurrection Act, which is the main legal mechanism that a president can use to activate the military or National Guard during times of rebellion or unrest. Other times they have relied on another federal law that allows the president to federalize National Guard troops under certain circumstances, which is what Trump did on Saturday.
Still, some experts told The Associated Press that the current standoff in Los Angeles is not comparable, from a legal perspective, to past situations.
“I think that the provision that Trump is using is really an exception to the norm," said Bernadette Meyler, a professor of constitutional law at Stanford University.
Here is a look at some of the most notable deployments:
George Floyd protests in Los Angeles in 2020
Almost five years ago, Newsom deployed approximately 8,000 National Guard troops to quell protests over racial injustice inspired by the Floyd's death in Minnesota. Well over half the troops deployed in California were sent to Los Angeles County, where police arrested more than 3,000 people. City officials, including then-Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, supported Newsom's decision.
Yale historian Elizabeth Hinton, who wrote a book about race-related uprisings and police violence, said the 2020 protests were characterized as violent but for the most part were not.
That’s even truer today, she said.
“There is no imminent threat that would require the mass deployment of militarized troops,” Hinton said.
Rodney King protests in 1992
Some have compared Trump's decision on Saturday to George H.W. Bush's use of the Insurrection Act to respond to the uprising in Los Angeles in 1992, after the acquittal of white police officers who were videotaped severely beating King, a Black motorist. In just six days, the protests became among the deadliest in American history. Sixty-three people died, nine of whom were killed by police.
Syreeta Danley, a teacher from South Central Los Angeles, said she vividly remembers as a teen seeing black smoke from her porch during the 1992 uprisings.
She said some people in her neighborhood were still more afraid of the police than the National Guard because once the troops left, local police “had the green light to continue brutalizing people."
The National Guard can enforce curfews like they did in 1992, but that won’t stop people from showing up to protest, Danley said.
“I have lived long enough to know that people will push back, and I’m here for it,” Danley said.
Watts protests in 1965
There were deadly protests in the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles in 1965 in response to pent-up anger over an abusive police force and lack of community resources. Over 30 people were killed, two-thirds of whom were shot by police or National Guard troops. Many say the neighborhood has never fully recovered from fires that leveled hundreds of buildings.
Breeze McDonald, a doctoral student and local school district employee from South Central Los Angeles, says she is still haunted by scars her aunt sustained after she was hosed down during the 1965 protests, and her own memories of the 1992 uprisings.
“A lot of the anger happened because our voices weren’t being heard. Because instead of stopping to listen, you decided to employ the National Guard," McDonald said.
Integration protests in the 1950 and 1960s
In 1956, the governor of Tennessee assigned National Guard troops to help enforce integration in Clinton, Tennessee, after white supremacists violently resisted federal orders to desegregate.
President Dwight Eisenhower called the Arkansas National Guard and the 101st Airborne Division of the U.S. Army in 1957 to escort nine Black students as they integrated a previously white-only school.
In 1963, Maryland’s Democratic Gov. J Millard Tawes deployed the Maryland National Guard to the small town of Cambridge to mediate violent clashes between white mobs and Black protesters demanding desegregation. The troops remained there for two years.
Selma, Alabama, voting rights protest in 1965
National Guard troops played a pivotal role in the march often credited with pressuring the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Nonviolent protesters calling for the right to vote — including the late Congressman John Lewis — were brutally assaulted by Alabama State Troopers in Selma, Alabama.
Two weeks later, then-President Lyndon B. Johnson sent National Guard troops to escort thousands of protesters along the 50-mile (80-kilometer) march to the state Capitol. Johnson's decision was at odds with then-Gov. George Wallace, who staunchly supported segregation.
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AP writer Terry Tang in Phoenix contributed. Brown reported from Washington, D.C. Phoenix Riddle and Kramon are corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.
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