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Trump says he could try to overturn DC home rule and deploy national guard – US politics live | Texas


Trump says he could try to overturn DC home rule and deploy national guard troops

Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office on Wednesday, Donald Trump said that White House lawyers “are already studying” the possibility of legislation to overturn the law granting the District of Columbia self-rule and imposing direct federal control of the capital. The president added that part of the plan would include “bringing in the national guard” to police the district’s streets.

The DC Home Rule Act, signed into law in 1973 by Richard Nixon, gives DC residents the right to elect the mayor, DC council members, and advisory neighborhood commissioners to run day-to-day affairs in the District.

Trump suggested that DC was unsafe based on the anecdotal evidence of one assault early Sunday in the district on Edward Coristine, a former member of Elon Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency who uses the nickname “Big Balls” online. Although Trump suggested that the incident was proof that the district was unable to police its streets, DC police said patrol officers had intervened to stop the assault and arrested two suspected attackers, both 15, on the spot. Emergency technicians then provided medical care to Coristine.

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ICC arrest warrant for Putin limits where any summit with Trump could take place

The White House confirmed on Wednesday that Donald Trump could meet Vladimir Putin to try to broker an end to the Russian war on Ukraine as soon as next week, but finding a neutral venue to host the summit might not be easy, given that the Russian president was indicted for war crimes in 2023 by the International Criminal Court, and so is subject to arrest in 125 countries.

That rules out Helsinki, where Trump and Putin met in 2018, since Finland is one of the 125 state parties to the Rome Statute authorizing the ICC, and so would be obliged to act on the court’s arrest warrant should Putin visit. Switzerland, Austria, Iceland, Malta, France, Spain and the United Kingdom, which all hosted cold war era summits between American and Soviet leaders, are also out, for the same reason.

Potsdam, where Truman met Stalin in 1945, is also impossible, since Germany is also a signatory to the ICC treaty.

Yalta, where FDR met Stalin and Churchill earlier the same year, would no doubt appeal to Trump’s sense of his own historic importance, but it is, inconveniently for the subject matter of these talks, in Crimea, which was the first part of Ukraine seized by Russia in 2014.

Trump is also unlikely to be welcome in Tehran, where FDR, Stalin and Churchill met in 1943, given the US air strikes on Iran’s nuclear enrichment facilities six weeks ago.

That could mean organizing a summit in Saudi Arabia or Turkey, where talks between Russia and Ukraine have already been held.

Another possibility is Hungary, given that its prime minister, Viktor Orbán, is close to both Trump and Putin, and announced his government’s intention to leave the ICC in April, while welcoming Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, to Budapest, despite an ICC warrant against him for war crimes in Gaza.

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