President Donald Trump is pictured strolling to Marine One to depart the White Home in Could, with the Washington Monument within the background.
Mandel Ngan/AFP by way of Getty Photographs
disguise caption
toggle caption
Mandel Ngan/AFP by way of Getty Photographs
President Trump mentioned he’s contemplating taking up the police drive of Washington, D.C., after a former member of the Division of Authorities Effectivity (DOGE) was injured in an tried carjacking over the weekend.
“He went by means of a nasty scenario to place it mildly, and there is an excessive amount of of it. We’ll do one thing about it,” Trump instructed reporters within the Oval Workplace on Wednesday night. He additionally mentioned, “That features bringing within the Nationwide Guard, possibly in a short time, too.”
When requested whether or not the administration needs to overturn D.C.’s house rule — a type of restricted self-government that town has operated underneath for half a century — Trump mentioned, “We’ll have a look at that. In reality the attorneys are already finding out it.”

The previous DOGE staffer whose assault led to Trump’s remarks is Edward Coristine, a 19-year-old nicknamed “Large Balls.” Coristine labored for the Common Providers Administration (GSA) — the place he was granted entry to Facilities for Medicare & Medicaid Providers fee knowledge — till his resignation in June, as NPR has reported.
In accordance with a Metropolitan Police Division (MPD) incident report shared with NPR, Coristine was standing with a lady close to his automotive in an space of Logan Circle — a neighborhood in northwest D.C. — round 3 a.m. on Sunday when he was attacked by a bunch of “roughly ten juveniles.”
“He noticed the suspects method and make a remark about taking the car,” the report reads. “At that time, for her security, he pushed his important different … into the car and turned to take care of the suspects. The suspects then started to assault [Coristine].”
A lot of the suspects fled on foot as patrolling police arrived, although the MPD mentioned officers arrested two of them — each 15 years previous — on the scene and charged them with unarmed carjacking. MPD additionally mentioned Coristine was handled on the scene for accidents sustained within the assault.
In a Tuesday Reality Social publish, Trump wrote that crime in D.C. is “completely uncontrolled,” alleging that youngsters are “randomly attacking, mugging, maiming, and taking pictures harmless Residents” and calling for the teenagers to be prosecuted as adults.

Whereas a 2023 spike in killings and robberies made town considered one of America’s deadliest, and juvenile crime stays a priority, violent crime in D.C. has been on the decline since final 12 months when it reached a 30-year low, in keeping with MPD knowledge.
What occurred to Coristine is comparatively uncommon, nevertheless it offered a political alternative for Trump, says George Derek Musgrove, an affiliate historical past professor on the College of Maryland, Baltimore County, and the co-author of Chocolate Metropolis: A Historical past of Race and Democracy within the Nation’s Capital.
“Trump simply mechanically presents it as illustrative of the development and subsequently it justifies what he needs to do,” he says.
Trump has repeatedly mentioned the federal authorities ought to take management of D.C., each on the marketing campaign path and for the reason that begin of his second time period.
This week, his calls have been instantly echoed by a variety of conservative figures, together with Elon Musk and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., who wrote in a publish on X that she helps Trump in “taking up town to ascertain regulation and order.”
So what would federalizing D.C. imply — and may Trump truly do it?

D.C. is house to some 700,000 residents, like these pictured at a 2024 farmer’s market within the NoMa neighborhood.
Al Drago/Bloomberg by way of Getty Photographs
disguise caption
toggle caption
Al Drago/Bloomberg by way of Getty Photographs
Federalizing D.C. is feasible, a minimum of in concept
D.C. is house not solely to the seat of the federal authorities however to over 700,000 residents, in keeping with 2024 census knowledge. It is also overwhelmingly blue: Trump solely gained about 4% of the D.C. vote in 2016, and lower than 7% in 2024.
Lately, Trump has been a vocal critic of town, calling it “filthy and crime-ridden,” “horribly run” and “a nightmare of homicide and crime.”
“The town does not significantly like him and he does not significantly like town,” says Musgrove. “And then you definately add to that that he is simply used to claiming the existence of a disaster as a way to declare that his place is the one option to clear up it … and D.C. is simply this very easy goal that he will hold coming again to.”
However Trump cannot single-handedly make good on his risk of federalizing the district.
Congress handed the House Rule Act in 1973, within the wake of the Civil Rights Motion. It gave D.C. residents extra management over their very own affairs — reminiscent of the fitting to elect a mayor and metropolis council members — however maintained Congressional oversight over issues like town’s finances and laws.
To vary that, Congress would want to overturn house rule. And that might be politically difficult, since Senate Democrats would theoretically be capable to block such laws by means of the filibuster.
Even so, two Republicans — Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, and Rep. Andy Ogles, R-Tenn. — launched such payments in February. For the primary time for the reason that begin of house rule, Musgrove says, each the Home and Senate now have payments geared toward repealing it.
“Trump can not do that himself,” Musgrove says. “Nonetheless, Congress underneath Republicans has proved greater than keen to do that for him if he asks for it. So it’s inside the realm of chance.”
However Musgrove additionally questions how a lot Trump actually needs the federal authorities to be tasked with the trivialities of metropolis governance, like trash pickups and filling potholes, particularly since he can exert energy over native authorities in different methods.
The federal authorities already has loads of energy in D.C.
House rule provides the president management over the D.C. Nationwide Guard, permitting him to name it into town with out native consent. It additionally permits the president to use D.C.’s police drive for as much as 30 days if he “determines that particular circumstances of an emergency nature exist which require the usage of the Metropolitan Police drive for federal functions” — although he must get Congressional approval to make use of the companies of the police drive for greater than 48 hours, in keeping with metropolis code.
In his first time period, Trump mused about placing D.C. underneath “way more management” by “pulling in” 1000’s of D.C. law enforcement officials to quell native Black Lives Matter protests in 2020, suggesting that the federal authorities would have “complete domination” over town, in keeping with a CNN transcript of a name he had with U.S. governors on the time. In the long run, although, he deployed the U.S. Park Police and Nationwide Guard.

President Donald Trump’s motorcade turns onto Pennsylvania Avenue as he returns to the White Home after a dinner in March 2017. He has referred to as town “filthy” and “horribly run.”
Alex Brandon/AP
disguise caption
toggle caption
Alex Brandon/AP
Trump has additionally used his powers to affect native priorities. Earlier this 12 months he issued an govt order creating the “D.C. Protected and Lovely Job Power,” whose objectives embody ramping up enforcement of federal immigration regulation, restoring federal public monuments and eradicating graffiti.

Simply this week, the Nationwide Park Service cited that order as a part of its justification for plans to reinstall a Accomplice statue that protesters toppled in 2020.
Extra broadly, Musgrove says house rule — and particularly, the specter of Trump pushing Congress to repeal it — provides Trump leverage in negotiations with D.C.’s Democratic mayor, Muriel Bowser.
“All he has to do is threaten, and the mayor will get the trace,” Musgrove says.
Whereas Bowser has lengthy been vocally vital of Trump, she’s additionally complied with a few of his calls for in current months, reminiscent of clearing homeless encampments and eradicating a “Black Lives Matter” avenue mural close to the White Home, after dealing with stress from the administration and Congress.
“The mural impressed tens of millions of individuals and helped our metropolis by means of a really painful interval, however now we will not afford to be distracted by meaningless congressional interference,” Bowser mentioned in a March assertion, after a Republican lawmaker launched a invoice that put federal funding in danger if D.C. did not take away it.

That is one instance of how Congress can form D.C.’s insurance policies. Federal lawmakers may also connect unrelated guidelines — referred to as “riders” — about D.C.’s autonomy to federal appropriations payments. They’ll resolve to overturn legal guidelines handed by the D.C. Council, because the Senate did in 2023 when it voted to dam a serious overhaul of town’s legal code. Musgrove says.
“[Lawmakers] realized that that may be actually good politics for individuals again house, and they also’ll attain into town to do issues like ban town from spending its personal cash on abortions or a needle trade,” Musgrove says. “It makes it troublesome for [D.C.] to create legal guidelines, create coverage, and execute them over time for the nice of the inhabitants.”