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Democratic governors send National Guard troops to D.C. for America 250 : NPR

Members of the National Guard patrol as National Park Service workers clean algae from the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool in Washington, D.C.

Rahmat Gul/AP


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Rahmat Gul/AP

WASHINGTON, D.C. — For the first time since President Trump controversially deployed the National Guard to the nation’s capital last year, several Democratic governors have sent members of their respective guards to the city.

Kentucky and North Carolina began the trend in recent weeks, each sending just a single guard member as D.C. readied for America 250 celebrations. Michigan then sent more than 100 last week, and Minnesota followed suit with 107 earlier this week, according to numbers made public by the D.C. Joint Task Force, which is coordinating Trump’s deployment in the city.

Those troops are joining thousands of uniformed, armed guard members who have maintained a continuous presence in the city since August. Until recently, troops have come from Washington, D.C. and more than a dozen Republican-led states, which offered up members of their guard as part of a joint federal task force launched by Trump to fight crime in the city, which was already trending down. U.S. territories Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands have also contributed members of their National Guard.

But these are the first troops sent from states led by Democrats, leading many legal experts who have been watching Trump’s deployment in D.C. to wonder whether those guard members will participate in the routine – and controversial – neighborhood patrols and overall militarized feeling of the nation’s capital that has become a trademark of this administration. Democrats have largely opposed the president’s deployment to the city.

D.C. is currently filled with more than 4,800 uniformed National Guard members patrolling residential streets, city parks and metro stops. That number has nearly doubled in the past month after federal officials announced a “summer surge” in law enforcement ahead of planned America 250 celebrations. The deployment now costs upwards of $2.8 million per day, according to an estimate by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.

National Guard troops patrol Union Station in May.

Matt Rourke/AP


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Matt Rourke/AP

Confusion over troops listed as part of the federal task force

When contacted by NPR, spokespeople for each respective governor’s office made it clear that their guard members were sent to help with the influx of crowds expected for America 250 celebrations taking place in the city this summer, not for law enforcement purposes as part of the larger ongoing federal Joint Task Force operation.

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But troops from all four Democratic-led states are listed as part of the official federal Joint Task Force numbers released to the public.


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