
National Guards in LA Spent Most of Their Time 'Playing Video Games'—Bass
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Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass criticized the federal deployment of National Guard troops in her city during an interview appearance on CBS News' Face the Nation on Sunday, stating that most of the soldiers were left with little to do other than "playing video games" and guarding empty federal buildings.
Around 4,000 guardsmen were deployed by President Donald Trump to Los Angeles early last month, against the wishes of state and city officials, in response to protests, some of which turned violent, against immigration enforcement actions across the city.
According to Bass, only 200 of those deployed were actually utilized, leaving the rest idling in "complete boredom."
Newsweek has reached out to the Defense Department for comment via email outside of regular working hours.
Why It Matters
Last month, Trump sent 4,000 National Guardsmen and 700 Marines to Los Angeles in response to reported violence against law enforcement, specifically ICE agents carrying out deportation raids in the city.
While the raids are following a legal directive from federal authorities, protests erupted amid reports that detainees were being held in the basement of a federal building. ICE denied the allegations, with a spokesperson previously telling Newsweek the agency "categorically refutes the assertions made by immigration activists in Los Angeles."
The clashes highlighted deepening conflicts between sanctuary jurisdictions and federal immigration policy, as Trump has implemented sweeping changes through executive orders and utilized the wartime Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to expand deportation authority.
What To Know
Bass and California Governor Gavin Newsom have been highly critical of the Trump's administration's decision to deploy the National Guard against their wishes, arguing it was overreach and unnecessary.
On Sunday, Bass told CBS News' Margaret Brennan that the thousands of National Guard troops had been largely confined to protecting two federal buildings and rarely engaged in protest management or local law enforcement actions.
"My understanding is most of their time has been spent in complete boredom playing video games and essentially waiting around because again, 4,000 deployed, and about 200 actually used," the Democratic mayor said.
Bass added that the immigration raid protests had remained mostly peaceful and were largely managed by local law enforcement, not federal troops.
"Our police department and our sheriff's department are the ones that brought the protests when it devolved into violence under control. We never needed the National Guard in the first place. This is a political stunt, a terrible misuse of taxpayers' dollars," she said.
On Tuesday, nearly six weeks after their initial deployment, the Pentagon announced that half of the National Guard soldiers would be released from duty. That still leaves around 2,000 guardsmen and a number of Marines left in the city.
Meanwhile, the original deployment order, set for 60 days, continues to be challenged in federal court.
Judge Charles Breyer of the U.S. District Court ruled last month that the federal mobilization exceeded presidential authority and violated the 10th Amendment. However, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals has since paused the ruling, allowing the deployment to continue while the court case proceeds.
California National Guard are positioned at the Federal Building on June 10 in downtown Los Angeles.
California National Guard are positioned at the Federal Building on June 10 in downtown Los Angeles.
Eric Thayer/AP
What People Are Saying
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said on Face the Nation on Sunday: "This is just such an incredible misuse of not only taxpayer's money, but of the young people who are in the National Guard, who have had to leave their families, their jobs and their education for this deployment that is completely unnecessary."
Governor Gavin Newsom wrote on X, formerly Twitter, on Tuesday after half the troops were released: "For more than a month, @realDonaldTrump has been exploiting @TheCalGuard as his political pawns. Thousands of members are still federalized in Los Angeles for no reason and unable to carry out their critical duties across the state. End this theater and send everyone home."
One National Guard soldier, who was not named, told The New York Times on Wednesday: "The moral injuries of this operation, I think, will be enduring. This is not what the military of our country was designed to do, at all."
A White House memo from last month reads: "Numerous incidents of violence and disorder have recently occurred and threaten to continue in response to the enforcement of federal law by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and other United States government personnel who are performing federal functions and supporting the faithful execution of federal immigration laws. In addition, violent protests threaten the security of and significant damage to federal immigration detention facilities and other federal property."
What Happens Next?
With half of the deployed National Guard troops sent home and legal challenges ongoing regarding presidential authority, the future of federal intervention in Los Angeles and other U.S. cities remains uncertain.
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