logo
Los Angeles cancels some July Fourth events amid deportation fears

Los Angeles cancels some July Fourth events amid deportation fears

NBC Newsa day ago
LOS ANGELES — Some Southern California communities are canceling or rescheduling July Fourth events as immigration arrests spread fear across the region.
But organizations that oppose President Donald Trump's immigration policies plan to proceed with protests in downtown Los Angeles, where large demonstrations last month sometimes turned violent, prompting Trump to call in the state National Guard and U.S. Marines over the governor's objections.
The city said it would postpone its annual Fourth of July block party 'in light of recent events affecting a portion of Downtown Los Angeles and the ongoing circumstances impacting the region.'
The event is held each year in Gloria Molina Grand Park near City Hall and several federal buildings, including one now being used as a detention center that has been a focal point for demonstrations against raids by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
During a 'No Kings' march on June 14, protesters fled from tear gas, pepper spray and less-lethal munitions fired by law enforcement officers, and large crowds were pushed away from federal buildings and into Grand Park, where demonstrators scrambled up a small hill to safety.
More than 1,618 people in Los Angeles have been arrested by the federal government since it began clamping down on residents without citizenship last month, according to the Department of Homeland Security.
The detentions have spread fear across Southern California, where some 1.4 million people are estimated to live without full legal authorization, according to the nonpartisan Migration Policy Institute.
Several L.A.-based organizations said they will launch another round of protests Thursday near Grand Park, and a coalition of multifaith organizations, labor unions, activists and artists will hold a 'freedom' car cruise and rally outside City Hall.
Later, activists with the group Centro CSO will hold a march outside the federal courthouse, calling for charges to be dropped against Alejandro Orellana, who was arrested in connection with distributing face shields to 'suspected rioters."
He faces charges of conspiracy to commit civil disorder and aiding and abetting civil disorders. He was released on bond last month and has a preliminary hearing scheduled for Thursday afternoon.
On Friday, the local chapter of 50501, which organized the 'No Kings' rally, will hold an all-day demonstration outside City Hall to demand an 'end to the occupation' of Los Angeles by ICE, the National Guard and the Marines.
'This isn't a celebration,' the group said in a statement. 'It's a stand.'
Smaller communities throughout Los Angeles County with large immigrant populations are also rethinking Fourth of July celebrations. In East Los Angeles, a historically Latino area, the neighborhoods of Boyle Heights, Lincoln Heights and El Sereno have postponed July Fourth festivities after several high-profile immigration arrests.
Federal agents last month rammed and trapped a car carrying four U.S. citizens, including a man, woman and two children, in Boyle Heights. The Department of Homeland Security said its target was Christian Damian Cerno-Camacho, who was arrested in connection with punching an immigration officer.
A lawyer representing Cerno-Camacho's family said he is planning to file a lawsuit against the federal government.
This week, Boyle Heights activists shut down a bridge that links downtown Los Angeles to the small enclave and marched with mariachis to the site of another recent arrest.
Demands for the National Guard to return to normal duties were answered in part this week when 150 members were reassigned to wildfire season preparation. Some 4,000 National Guard members and 700 Marines remain at federal buildings in Los Angeles while a lawsuit filed by the state against the Trump administration is pending in court.
A three-judge appeals court panel has said that the White House likely lawfully exercised its authority when Trump federalized the National Guard without Gov. Gavin Newsom's consent. The ruling halted a lower court's decision, which found the Trump administration had illegally activated the troops.
Newsom said last month that he will pursue legal action to regain control of the guard.
Lawmakers and legal organizations are waging their own court battles ahead of the holiday weekend. On Wednesday, immigrant rights groups filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration, seeking to block an 'ongoing pattern and practice of flouting the Constitution and federal law' during immigration raids in Los Angeles.
'Since June 6th, marauding, masked goons have descended upon Los Angeles, terrorizing our brown communities and tearing up the Constitution in the process,' said Mohammad Tajsar, senior staff attorney with the ACLU Foundation of Southern California.
'No matter their status or the color of their skin," he added, "everyone is guaranteed Constitutional rights to protect them from illegal stops. We will hold DHS accountable.'
The Department of Homeland Security said in a statement that the claims are false.
This week, county supervisors approved a motion to pursue legal action against the Trump administration. The vote came after U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi filed a lawsuit against Los Angeles over its sanctuary city policies, which prevent local police agencies from voluntarily cooperating with federal immigration enforcement.
The U.S. government claims sanctuary city ordinances discriminate against federal law enforcement agencies by treating them differently from other policing authorities.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Donald Trump's 'terrible' pet name for wife Melania revealed as he admits to using it every night
Donald Trump's 'terrible' pet name for wife Melania revealed as he admits to using it every night

Daily Mail​

time25 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Donald Trump's 'terrible' pet name for wife Melania revealed as he admits to using it every night

President Donald Trump revealed his nickname for wife Melania and then went on to admit it was 'terrible.' During his speech in Iowa on Thursday night, the president slipped up, calling his wife of 25 years by her pet name. 'I remember saying to our great first lady…' he began, before adding: 'I call her 'First Lady,' isn't it terrible?' 'I say, 'Good night, First Lady, my darling,' because it reminds me that I'm president,' he noted. Melania must have been on his mind as he had seen her shortly before leaving for his rally. The couple had met freed American hostage Edan Alexander in the Oval Office, where the president revealed his wife's concern about the captives in the Gaza war. 'The first lady, it was very important to her,' Trump told Alexander and his family. Melania Trump is spending a rare few days at the White House to celebrate the Fourth of July. She'll join President Trump on the South Lawn to watch the fireworks and to host a picnic for military members. On Thursday, the first lady visited Children's National Hospital in Washington D.C., where she made patriotic decorations with kids and decorated the Children's Health Garden for the holiday. She even invited the group to come to the White House for the 250th Independence Day celebration next year on July 4, 2026 and told them about the upcoming celebration including the fireworks show and F14 flyovers. The first lady joked about her husband's love of golf when kids asked if she shared President Donald Trump 's love of the sport. 'No, I don't play golf,' she laughed, but disclosed that she used to play. Nine former and current patients of the hospital in Washington, D.C. sat with Trump for an art session, decorating rocks to put in the Children's Health Garden and coloring on note pads branded with the first lady's signature 'Be Best' initiative. The first lady brought the kids goodie bags with blankets, children's books and teddy bears with 'Best Best' t-shirts. The kids went outside after their crafts session with Trump to use their art to decorate the Healing Garden at the hospital. And Melania Trump showed them a new flower - the 'External Flame' hybrid tea rose, which is a highly fragrant yellow rose - the White House donated to the garden. Following her visit to the healing garden, Trump made private visits with heart and kidney transplant patients. The first lady has made children's wellbeing a priority through her Be Best program. Trump visited the hospital every year around Christmas during her first tenure as first lady. It is a longtime tradition for the spouse of a president to visit the children's care center around the holidays. Melania Trump spends most of her time in New York, where their son Barron is a student at New York University. Before returning to the White House for her second tenure as first lady, she said she would be in Washington D.C. on an as needed basis. 'I will be in the White House. When I need to be in New York, I will be in New York. When I need to be in Palm Beach, I will be in Palm Beach,' she told Fox News. 'My first priority is, you know, to be a mom, to be a first lady, to be a wife.' After the fireworks on Friday, the Trumps will head to Bedminster, N.J., where they have a home on Trump's golf course there.

Trump to host UFC fight at White House
Trump to host UFC fight at White House

Telegraph

time27 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Trump to host UFC fight at White House

The White House lawn is usually where Donald Trump delivers brutal slapdowns of his political opponents before the world's media. Next year, it could become the political battleground could be transformed into a ring, with the world's top fighters facing off in an Ultimate Fighting Champion (UFC) championship bout to mark America's 250th birthday. Mr Trump unveiled the plans at a rally in Iowa on Thursday, telling supporters the event would take place in front of up to 25,000 people. 'We're going to have a UFC fight on the grounds of the White House. We have a lot of land there. Dana is going to do it,' Mr Trump said. The UFC is yet to officially confirm any details of the event but Mr White, who supported the president during his re-election campaign last November, shared the news on X alongside the caption: 'This will be epic'. The company's Instagram account also shared a video of Mr Trump's announcement, before asking fans who they would like to see fight at the White House. Conor McGregor, who is credited with making the UFC a global sport, said he would be 'honoured' to star in the event. 'Count me in!' he posted on X after wishing Americans a happy 4th of July. McGregor, who met Mr Trump at the White House on St Patrick's Day, has not fought in the UFC since breaking his leg in 2021, but periodically teases his return to the sport. Colby Covington, a former interim champion, is also a big Trump supporter, and was frequently pictured wearing a Make America Great Again (MAGA) hat during the election. Covington, who is from Florida, even blamed campaigning for Mr Trump for his loss to Joaquin Buckley in December. Sean Strickland, a former Middleweight champion from Anaheim, California, is another vocal Trump supporter. On Thursday, Strickland posted on X in response to a trans swimmer being stripped of their medals in response to a directive from Mr Trump: 'It went from William Thomas to Lia Thomas back to William is finally healing. LFG Trump'. Neither the White House or the UFC have provided details on where exactly the fight would take place, but there are a few limited options. One option is the Rose Garden, a smaller, more intimate outdoor space often used for presidential addresses or events. But the administration recently started work on paving over the grass in the Rose Garden, making it less likely. More likely is a makeshift Octagon on the South Lawn, the largest open area on the White House grounds, covering three acres. It's often used for large events and state ceremonies, meaning it has the capacity to host large crowds. At the centre of the UFC is White, who rescued the company from bankruptcy in the early 2000s and transformed it into a multi-billion dollar global enterprise. At the time, Mr Trump was one of the few figures who offered White a platform, allowing events to be hosted at the Trump Taj Mahal in Atlantic City when others refused. The two have been friends and political allies ever since. White spoke at both the 2016 and 2020 Republican conventions, before appearing alongside Mr Trump's closest friends and family when he retook the White House in November. Mr Trump is regularly treated as a guest of honour at the UFC, where he walks out alongside White to the roar of thousands of fans. Over the past decade, the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) has evolved from a fringe combat league – once denounced by the late Republican senator John McCain as 'human cockfighting' – into one of America's most influential cultural platforms. It is a mixed-martial arts promotion in which a series of fights take place around the world, also known as fight nights. It calls itself the 'premier organisation in Mixed Marshall Arts (MMA)'. The UFC is broadcast in over 170 countries, and reaches over 900 million households. Perched behind Mr Trump in the front row you will often see some of his closest political allies including RFK Jr, the health secretary; Kash Patel, the FBI director; and Elon Musk, who until recently was a key figure in the administration and close friend of the president. Hollywood stars and musicians are also staples at UFC events, including Chris Pratt, Jared Letto, Matt Damon and French footballer Kylian Mbappe.

Trump criticised for using antisemitic term to describe money lenders
Trump criticised for using antisemitic term to describe money lenders

Leader Live

time42 minutes ago

  • Leader Live

Trump criticised for using antisemitic term to describe money lenders

Mr Trump told reporters early on Friday after returning from an event in Iowa that he had 'never heard it that way' and 'never heard that' the term was considered an offensive stereotype about Jews. Shylock refers to the villainous Jewish moneylender in Shakespeare's The Merchant Of Venice who demands a pound of flesh from a debtor. The Anti-Defamation League, which works to combat antisemitism, said in a statement that the term 'evokes a centuries-old antisemitic trope about Jews and greed that is extremely offensive and dangerous. President Trump's use of the term is very troubling and irresponsible'. Democrat Joe Biden, while vice president, said in 2014 that he had made a 'poor choice' of words a day after he used the term in remarks to a legal aid group. Mr Trump's administration has said cracking down on antisemitism is a priority. His administration said it is screening for antisemitic activity when granting immigration benefits and its fight with Harvard University has centred on allegations from the White House that the school has tolerated antisemitism. But the Republican president has also had a history of playing on stereotypes about Jewish people. He told the Republican Jewish Coalition in 2015 that 'you want to control your politicians' and suggested the audience used money to exert control. Before he kicked off his 2024 presidential campaign, Mr Trump drew widespread criticism for dining at his Florida club with a Holocaust-denying white nationalist. Last year, he made repeated comments accusing Jewish Americans who identify as Democrats of disloyalty because of the Democratic leaders' criticisms of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Critics said it perpetuated an antisemitic trope about Jews having divided loyalties and there being only one right way to be Jewish. On Thursday night in his speech in Iowa, Mr Trump used the term while talking about his signature legislation that was passed by Congress earlier in the day. 'No death tax, no estate tax, no going to the banks and borrowing some from, in some cases, a fine banker and in some cases shylocks and bad people,' he said. When a reporter later asked about the word's antisemitic association and his intent, Mr Trump said; 'No, I've never heard it that way. To me, a shylock is somebody that's a money lender at high rates. I've never heard it that way. You view it differently than me. I've never heard that.' The Anti-Defamation League said Mr Trump's use of the word 'underscores how lies and conspiracies about Jews remain deeply entrenched in our country. Words from our leaders matter and we expect more from the President of the United States'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store