As U.S. marines land in L.A., protestors — and the governor — say the army is not wanted in any respect


For the better part of Tuesday afternoon, yet another protest simmered behind a federal detention centre in downtown Los Angeles, which has been the epicentre for demonstrations against the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown since the weekend.

Demonstrators gathered, some teenagers and some adults with young children on their shoulders, as organizers regularly reminded them to keep the temperature down during protests against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids in the city. 

Standing shoulder-to-shoulder while holding rifles and shields, members of the National Guard formed a line at the entrance of the parking lot.

“We are here to protest, not to fight,” said Delilah Franco, 22, before taking the mic to remind the growing crowd to stay out of the road and on the sidewalk.

WATCH | Having National Guard in L.A. ‘frightening,’ protester says: 

L.A. protester says ICE raids are ‘sick’

Delilah Franco, 22, was at Tuesday’s demonstration protesting the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown in downtown Los Angeles, and told CBC News she felt the increased military presence in the city was meant to ‘instill fear in the citizens.’

Hundreds of U.S. marines joined a contingent of National Guard troops in Los Angeles Tuesday at the direction of U.S. President Donald Trump. Their arrival was swiftly condemned by state and city officials, while protesters said they believed the military presence was an attempt to antagonize lawful demonstrations that had shrunk since the weekend. 

“It’s frightening, it’s scary, but it’s obviously used to instill fear in the citizens,” Franco said of the marines and National Guard being deployed. 

“We’re here chanting to let the people in that [federal detention] building know we’re here for them and they’re not alone … we gotta keep fighting until there’s some change being made.”

There were fewer clashes between protesters and police officers Tuesday than there were Sunday, when demonstrators briefly closed the 101 freeway. 

Tuesday’s protest was isolated to the block around the Metropolitan Detention Centre. Elsewhere, the only signs of unrest were days-old “F–k ICE” graffiti and the husk of a sole burned-out car.

Members of the Los Angeles Police Department moved in on the crowd of about 200 people along Alameda Street mid-afternoon on Tuesday, corralling the protesters from both sides until most of the crowd had left.

Late in the afternoon, L.A. Mayor Karen Bass announced at a news conference that the city would be imposing a curfew for parts of downtown from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. PT. She also declared a local emergency and said the curfew might last several days.

Uniformed police wearing helmets and holding batons stand in front of a small group of protesters including one holding a Mexican flag.
Members of the LAPD stand in a line across a street in downtown Los Angeles Tuesday as protesters gather. Protests in the city had diminished compared to demonstrations over the weekend. (Rhianna Schmunk/CBC)

Trump ‘crossed a red line,’ Newsom says 

“It’s so enraging to see that he can use this power for the bad,” Franco said, referring to Trump authorizing the deployment of the marines and National Guard. “It’s bullshit, I’m sorry.”

“I feel like he’s doing it to California to send a message to the other states and the country.”

While tension on the streets of Los Angeles had eased, the conflict between California Gov. Gavin Newsom and the Trump administration took another step forward. Newsom, a Democrat, asked the courts for an emergency intervention to limit Trump’s use of the National Guard in the city.

“A President of the United States who’s unhinged and has now crossed a red line in this country,” Newsom said in a video posted to X.

More than a dozen protesters who spoke with CBC News said they were bewildered by the military presence, saying the protests were largely peaceful and any escalations were being controlled by the LAPD. The police department on Saturday put out a statement commending demonstrators for keeping the peace.

“This is America. ‘Land of the free,’ ” said Isaac, 38, making air quotes with his fingers. He said he was a lifelong resident of L.A. whose parents immigrated to the United States. 

“The marines, they’re not well trained to deal with population control like LAPD,” he said. “They’re trained to shoot to kill.” 

Men in military uniforms stand in front of military vehicles lining a street in an area with palm trees.
Marines stand near military vehicles as they prepare to depart for Los Angeles from an unknown location, in this image released on Monday. (U.S. Northern Command/Reuters)

One member of an interfaith group said they sympathized with the members of the service who had been ordered to face down their fellow Americans.

“They are being placed in a moral conundrum,” said Tanya Lopez, 38, a first-generation American whose parents immigrated from Mexico. She noted that the service members are supposed to be protecting civilians of they nation they serve, yet were being deployed against them.

“They are just trying to incite violence and pit us one against the other,” she said. 

WATCH | California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Trump deploying marines in L.A.:

California Gov. Newsom accuses Trump of using marines as political pawns

The Trump administration has ordered U.S. marines into Los Angeles and intensified raids on suspected undocumented immigrants, fuelling more outrage from street protesters. California Gov. Gavin Newsom accused U.S. President Donald Trump of trying to manufacture a crisis and violating California’s state sovereignty and the U.S. Constitution.

President claims military intervention was necessary

Trump has said military intervention was necessary to maintain law and order in the city. He referred to demonstrators on Tuesday as “animals” and “paid insurrectionists.”

“If we didn’t send out the National Guard … Los Angeles would be burning right now!” Trump said in the Oval Office Tuesday.

The authorization came amid Monday’s mostly peaceful protests in the country’s second-largest city.

It is rare, but not illegal, for the president to deploy National Guard troops despite the objections of the governor and local leaders. It is rarer still for marines to be deployed on home soil.

California Attorney General Rob Bonta filed a lawsuit Monday over the use of National Guard troops following the first deployment, telling reporters that Trump had “trampled” the state’s sovereignty.

Weekday demonstrations were far less raucous than those held on Sunday, with thousands attending a peaceful rally at city hall and hundreds protesting outside a federal complex that includes a detention centre where some immigrants are being held following immigration raids at workplaces across the city.

WATCH | L.A. mayor says ICE raids must stop: 

ICE raids must stop, Los Angeles mayor says

At a news conference Tuesday, Los Angeles Mayor Bass called for an end to federal immigration raids in the city and slammed the Trump administration’s deployment of National Guard and marines following several days of protests over the stepped-up enforcement. ‘The real solution of all of this is for the administration to stop the raids,’ Bass said of the unrest roiling the city.

Bass, the mayor, said her administration has heard the ICE raids could continue for the next 30 days, if not longer. 

“It’s a sense of intimidation and fear that is just so unnecessary and so corrosive to our city,” Bass said at a Tuesday news conference. The mayor said she would place a call to Trump asking him to stop the raids.

Protests against Trump’s immigration policies also began to spread across the country, with more planned into the weekend.

From Seattle and Austin to Chicago and Washington, D.C., marchers have chanted slogans, carried anti-ICE signs and snarled traffic through downtown avenues and outside federal offices. 

Activists are planning more and even larger demonstrations in the coming days, with “No Kings” events across the country on Saturday to coincide with Trump’s planned military parade through Washington.

Meanwhile, back in L.A., Isaac said his hometown wouldn’t take the military intervention lying down.

“The city of Los Angeles, California? We’re not going to give up without a fight,” he said. “We’re sick and tired.”





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