'Leave our kids alone': Schools reopen in DC with parents on edge over
Trump's armed patrols
[August 26, 2025]
By MARK SHERMAN, ASHRAF KHALIL and SOPHIA TAREEN
WASHINGTON (AP) — Public schools reopened Monday in the nation’s tense
capital with parents on edge over the presence in their midst of
thousands of National Guard troops — some now armed — and large
scatterings of federal law enforcement officers carrying out President
Donald Trump's orders to make the District of Columbia a safer place.
Even as Trump started talking about other cities — “Do not come to
Chicago,” was the Democratic Illinois governor's clipped response — the
president again touted a drop in crime that he attributed to his
extraordinary effort to take over policing in Washington, D.C. The
district's mayor, meanwhile, was lamenting the effect of Trump's actions
on children in her city.
"Parents are anxious. We’ve heard from a lot of them," Mayor Muriel
Bowser said at a news conference, noting that some might keep their
children out of school because of immigration concerns.
“Any attempt to target children is heartless, is mean, is uncalled for
and it only hurts us,” she said. “I would just call for everybody to
leave our kids alone.”
Rumors of police activity abound
As schools opened across the capital city, parental social media groups
and listservs were buzzing with reports and rumors of checkpoints and
arrests.
The week began with some patrolling National Guard units now carrying
firearms. The change stemmed from a directive issued late last week by
his Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.

Armed National Guard troops from Ohio, South Carolina and Tennessee were
seen around the city Monday. But not every patrol appears to be carrying
weapons. An Associated Press photographer said the roughly 30 troops he
saw on the National Mall on Monday morning were unarmed.
Armed Guard members in Washington will be operating under long-standing
rules for the use of military force inside the U.S., the military task
force overseeing all the troops deployed to D.C. said Monday. Those
rules, broadly, say that while troops can use force, they should do so
only “in response to an imminent threat of death or serious bodily harm”
and “only as a last resort.”
The task force has directed questions on why the change was necessary to
Hegseth’s office. Those officials have declined to answer those
questions. Speaking in the Oval Office on Monday, Hegseth said that it
was common sense to arm them because it meant they were “capable of
defending themselves and others.”
Among their duties is picking up trash, the task force said, though it's
unclear how much time they will spend doing that.
Bowser reiterated her opposition to the National Guard's presence. “I
don’t believe that troops should be policing American cities,” she said.
Trump is considering expanding the deployments to other Democratic-led
cities, including Baltimore, Chicago and New York, saying the situations
in those cities require federal action. In Washington, his
administration says more than 1,000 people have been arrested since Aug.
7, including 86 on Sunday.

“We took hundreds of guns away from young kids, who were throwing them
around like it was candy. We apprehended scores of illegal aliens. We
seized dozens of illegal firearms. There have been zero murders,” Trump
said Monday.
Some other cities bristle at the possibility of military on the
streets
The possibility of the military patrolling streets of Chicago, the
nation’s third-largest city, prompted immediate backlash, confusion and
a trail of sarcastic social media posts.
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National Guard soldiers stand outside the Smithsonian Air and Space
Museum on the National Mall in Washington, as part of President
Donald Trump's order to use federal law enforcement to expel
homeless people and rid the nation's capital of violent crime,
Monday, Aug. 25, 2025. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, a first-term Democrat, has called it
unconstitutional and threatened legal action. Illinois Gov. JB
Pritzker deemed it a distraction and unnecessary as crime rates in
Chicago are down, as they are nationwide.
Trump suggested multiple times earlier Monday that he might dispatch
the National Guard to Chicago regardless of Pritzker’s opinion,
calling the city a “killing field."
Pritzker and other Illinois officials said the Trump administration
has not reached out to Chicago leaders about any federal initiative
to deploy military personnel to the city to combat crime. They cited
statistics showing drops in violent crime in Chicago and cast
Trump’s move as performative, partisan and racist.
“Mr. President, do not come to Chicago,” Pritzker said, standing in
a park about a mile from the Chicago skyscraper that features
Trump’s name in large lettering. The governor said he would fight
the “petty whims of an arrogant little man” who “wants to use the
military to occupy a U.S. city, punish his dissidents and score
political points.”
Others raised questions about where patrols might go and what role
they might play. By square mileage, Chicago is more than three times
the size of Washington, and neighborhoods with historically high
crime are spread far apart.
Former Chicago Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy, who also worked
for the New York Police Department, wondered what the National Guard
would do in terms of fighting street violence. He said if there was
clear communication, they could help with certain tasks, like
perimeter patrol in high-crime neighborhoods, but only as part of a
wider plan and in partnership with police.
National Guard troops were used in Chicago to help with the
Democratic National Convention last summer and during the 2012 NATO
Summit.

Overall, violent crime in Chicago dropped significantly in the first
half of 2025, representing the steepest decline in over a decade,
according to police data. Shootings and homicides were down more
than 30% in the first half of the year compared with the same time
last year, and total violent crime dropped by over 22%.
Still, some neighborhoods, including Austin on the city’s West Side,
where the Rev. Ira Acree is a pastor, experience persistent high
crime.
Acree said he’s received numerous calls from congregants upset about
the possible deployment. He said if Trump was serious about crime
prevention, he would boost funding for anti-violence initiatives.
“This is a joke,” Acree said. “This move is not about reducing
violence. This is reckless leadership and political grandstanding.
It’s no secret that our city is on the president’s hit list.”
In June, roughly 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 Marines were
sent to Los Angeles to deal with protests over the administration’s
immigration crackdown. California’s Democratic governor, Gavin
Newsom, and other local elected officials objected.
___
Tareen reported from Chicago. Associated Press writers Konstantin
Toropin and Will Weissert contributed to this report.
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