President Trump signed an government order to create a specialised Nationwide Guard unit that may very well be deployed to help native regulation enforcement in D.C. He additionally needs to finish cashless bail.
STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:
The president is aiming to broaden the function of the Nationwide Guard in policing, utilizing the Guard that’s based mostly within the District of Columbia. And he is additionally threatening to punish D.C. and different cities across the nation in the event that they abolish money bail, which Washington has carried out. Let’s speak about this with WAMU’s senior D.C. politics reporter Alex Koma. Alex, good morning.
ALEX KOMA, BYLINE: Hey, good morning.
INSKEEP: Cashless bail goes to be a brand new idea to some folks. So how does it work, and why is the president so targeted on it?
KOMA: Yeah. Effectively, the fundamental thought is that, you already know, when you’re accused of a criminal offense, you are being held in jail earlier than trial, you do not have to submit a cash bond in an effort to get out. The choice is solely within the arms of the courts or, you already know, the judges to determine, you already know, whether or not you are a threat to group when you be launched. And D.C. hasn’t had, you already know, a money bail system since 1992. The reform was kind of, you already know, made as a result of I feel lawmakers acknowledged that it disproportionately impacted poor Black folks caught ready in jail till their trial as a result of they could not afford to pay.
INSKEEP: And the president objects to this why? It appears comfortable on crime?
KOMA: Yeah. I imply, his declare is that it lets murderers simply stroll free, however that is extraordinarily uncommon. I imply, simply 4% of all folks right here in D.C. had been launched earlier than trial had been accused of violent crimes final yr. So, you already know, that is one thing that has probably not had unfavorable penalties. That being stated, you already know, native leaders are nonetheless on edge right here as a result of Trump has been meddling with the town’s affairs so much lately, together with seizing management of the police division, sending within the Nationwide Guard and different federal brokers.
INSKEEP: What extra does he need to do now with the Nationwide Guard?
KOMA: Sure, so he says he needs to coach a particular unit of the Guard devoted to public security in D.C., and he can try this as a result of he does have command of the Guard right here. D.C. is not a state, so there isn’t any governor who’d be accountable for it. Trump additionally needs to ship related assets to the Guard in different cities to help in responding to, quote-unquote, “civil unrest.” However the Guard is, after all, restricted by what it may do to patrol American cities. You understand, troops can reply in the event that they’re attacked, however they do not have police powers and even actually the coaching to help police. So, you already know, nobody is admittedly certain how this half goes to work.
INSKEEP: How a lot of this could the president replicate in different cities the place he would have much less direct authority than he might need in Washington, D.C.?
KOMA: Yeah, I feel California factors the way in which right here. You understand, he can declare some kind of emergency pretext, as he did in Los Angeles, and ship in federal troops, however it’ll finally run into guardrails. You could have governors which have standing to sue, resembling Gavin Newsom, who did, and, you already know, then it may play out within the courts.
D.C., you do not have the identical scenario, and I feel that reveals why he is doing issues right here. Town lives in perpetual worry that, you already know, he’ll crew up with Congress to revoke what restricted self-governance the federal government does have right here, and that scenario goes to stay unchanged, whatever the president or occasion in energy, until the town is sometime made a state. He has a lot much less affect somewhere else, until Congress occurs to step in.
INSKEEP: Senior D.C. politics reporter Alex Koma of our member station WAMU, considered one of lots of of NPR stations and communities throughout this nation. Alex, thanks a lot.
KOMA: It was so nice to be right here.
Copyright © 2025 NPR. All rights reserved. Go to our web site terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for additional info.
Accuracy and availability of NPR transcripts might range. Transcript textual content could also be revised to appropriate errors or match updates to audio. Audio on npr.org could also be edited after its unique broadcast or publication. The authoritative report of NPR’s programming is the audio report.