By Nick Catoggio
Tuesday, June 10, 2025
Ifind it funny that Gavin Newsom is trying to raise public alarm, with plenty of
justification, about an authoritarian show of military force in his state’s
biggest city and the universal reaction among political junkies is, “Wow, this
is basically a Donald
Trump campaign ad.”
It’s not “ha ha” funny, but you learn to find the humor
in these situations once you’ve given up on America.
Monday was comparatively quiet in Los Angeles after this
weekend’s unrest, and the president was eager to take credit. “I think we
have it very well under control,” he told reporters two days after ordering 2,000 National Guard members
to Los Angeles. “We got it just in time. It’s still simmering a little bit, but
not very much,” he added.
Then he turned around and doubled the number of troops.
More than doubled, actually: On Monday evening Trump ordered another
2,000 members of the guard into action as well as 700
active-duty Marines. That brings the total force en route to L.A. to 4,700.
To put that in perspective, the initial invasion of Grenada in 1983 involved 2,000.
That wasn’t all. The San
Francisco Chronicle got hold of a letter that
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem sent to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth
requesting that he authorize the troops to detain or arrest “lawbreakers.” To
some experts that sounded like a prelude to invoking the Insurrection Act,
traditionally a political nuclear option that’s used only when public order has
broken down completely. Why do that if things are “very well under control”?
But that wasn’t all, either. In their haste to show that
no one is above the law (a radically new concept in
Trumpworld), more than one member of the administration has proposed
arresting Newsom and/or Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass. Immigration czar Tom
Homan clarified that that should happen only if either obstructs federal law
enforcement, but the president seems keen to do it just because. “I think it
would be a great thing,” Trump said Monday.
When reporters asked him what crime Newsom had committed
that would warrant arrest, he answered, “I
think his primary crime is running for governor because he’s done such a bad
job.”
Arrest my enemies is the state of play in a
standoff that some members of the commentariat claim, probably correctly, is an
80-20 issue in Trump’s favor.
“If you saw all this in any other country—soldiers sent
to crush dissent, union leaders arrested, opposition politicians threatened—it
would be clear that autocracy had arrived,” New York Times columnist Michelle
Goldberg wrote on Monday. “Dissent” is far too
charitable a word to describe masked chuds tossing rocks at cops, but there’s
no doubt that elements of Trump’s base are gung-ho for a fascist crackdown in
full flower. “We’re in the Third World War,” Steve Bannon, the populist id of
the MAGA base, told The
Spectator. “We need to start arresting government officials, including
the Mayor of Los Angeles, Karen Bass, who’s stirring this pot up.”
It’s World War III … but it’s also barely at a simmer
according to the president. That sounds to me like the makings of an
old-fashioned frog boil.
Desensitization.
One of Trump’s great demagogic talents is his ability to
desensitize Americans to his transgressions. Often he does it by framing
things as “jokes” when they aren’t, like when he talks about making Canada
the 51st state or running for a third term.
In other cases, as with annexing Greenland, he’s serious
from the jump but remains vague
about his plans so as not to cause immediate alarm.
That makes it easy for skeptics to reassure themselves that he won’t follow
through—but meanwhile the seed of possibility has been planted. Menacing the
island into capitulating, an unthinkable scenario six months ago, is now
thinkable. And thinkable scenarios tend not to inspire the same degree of
resistance as unthinkable ones do.
That’s the art of boiling
frogs. Turn the temperature up rapidly and they’ll hop out of the pot. Turn
it up gradually and they get used to the heat—until they die.
Trump has mastered that art well enough that sometimes he
wins even when he loses. Last week, for instance, his administration
surrendered in its months-long standoff with the federal judiciary over Kilmar
Abrego Garcia, the accused gang member who was deported to El Salvador in
violation of a court order. Abrego Garcia is now back
in the U.S. and facing multiple criminal charges,
possibly warranted and possibly
not. The White House complied with the law. Due process won!
Did it, though? Hundreds of other deportees remain stuck
in the same El Salvadoran dungeon without the benefit of legal process and in
most cases without
any criminal record. At least one prisoner among them obviously isn’t a gangster. Yet
there isn’t much agitation in the U.S. on their behalf as far as I’m aware. You
can almost feel the frogs adjusting to the heat, especially now that Abrego
Garcia’s return “proves” that the system works.
The next time Trump opts to send a bunch of detainees to
some foreign black site without checking if they’re guilty of anything, it
won’t be an outrage. It’ll just be how things are done.
That’s why he’s pouring more troops into Los Angeles
despite the situation being “very well under control,” I think. It’s not
primarily to provoke the protesters, as Newsom keeps insisting—although
if that does happen and U.S. troops come under attack from rock-throwers, the
president will welcome it as a reason to crack down harshly. If you like the
idea of a “Donald Trump campaign ad” where the Marines roll down the Sunset
Strip, you’ll love the one where they get to shoot into a crowd.
I think he’s sending more troops simply to desensitize
Americans to the transgression. He wants to be able to deploy the military
internally during his presidency as a matter of course, but it’ll take work to
weaken the old taboo against doing so. He can’t turn the heat all the way up
quickly or the frogs will hop out. So he’s turning it up gradually, starting
with a low-stakes situation in L.A.: The violence isn’t widespread, he hasn’t
invoked the Insurrection Act, and the troops involved are limited (for now) to protecting federal property and personnel.
We need troops there because it’s World War III, but also
you shouldn’t care because it’s very well under control. What’s the big deal?
He’s seizing an opportunity to plant the seed of
possibility about American soldiers policing American streets in hopes of
making the country comfortable with the idea. The fact that Gavin Newsom, our
most unctuous progressive politician, is Trump’s chief foil in the standoff
makes it that much sweeter. “We couldn’t script this any better,” said one
person close to the White House who was described as “gleeful” by Politico.
“Newsom is playing the part.”
The idea of a presidential administration being gleeful
about riots is also darkly funny in a “ha ha America deserves to perish” sort
of way.
Law and order.
One way to tell that Trump’s military show of force has
more to do with frog-boiling than with providing security is how the LAPD
reacted to it.
On Sunday police chief Jim McDonnell admitted that things
had “gotten
out of control.” Even so, he’s not eager for help from the Marines. “The
possible arrival of federal military forces in Los Angeles—absent clear
coordination—presents a significant logistical and operational challenge for
those of us charged with safeguarding this city,” he said in
a statement on Monday. Instead of keeping the peace, the cops now have to worry
about friendly fire amid the chaos and potential confrontations between the
troops and rioters.
Another clue that the president’s operation in Los
Angeles is mainly an exercise in frog-boiling lies in this question: What legal
authority is Trump claiming to justify sending Marines there?
It can’t be the statute that he’s using to deploy the
National Guard. That
law extends only to the guard itself, not to the
regular military—and the president is arguably violating it, by the way, since
it requires him to issue orders “through the governor” instead of directly. To
use the regular military inside the United States, he needs to invoke the
Insurrection Act. But he hasn’t done that (yet), probably because he’s wary of
turning up the heat too fast.
The answer to my question is that there’s
no valid legal authority in effect that entitles him
to send the Marines. But by deploying the guard this weekend, he desensitized
Americans to the possibility of sending additional troops; then, when he did
send additional troops, he slipped 700 Marines in there alongside another 2,000
guardsmen. Essentially he’s created a workaround to the Insurrection Act by
“bootstrapping” deployments of regular soldiers into the statute that covers
the National Guard, “blurring the line” between the two, as defense expert Kori
Schake put it.
And he’s betting that Americans won’t care, probably
correctly. Trump believes the frogs are so willing to be boiled in the name of
suppressing riots that they won’t ask questions about the lawfulness of his
methods. For months people like me and David
French worried that he would abuse the Insurrection
Act, but it seems we were worried for nothing because … the president isn’t
bothering to use the act to justify what he’s doing. He’s just doing what he
wants in the belief that the public will let him. 80-20 issue, bro!
ICE’s tactics lately have also involved some
frog-boiling. This Wall
Street Journal account of the irregularities the
agency has stooped to in trying to realize Stephen Miller’s dream of a whiter
America, one deportation at a time, is worth reading in full:
The administration’s immigration
enforcement is a sharp break with past government practices, according to
attorneys, immigration advocates and officials from previous administrations.
Federal agents make warrantless
arrests. Masked agents take people into custody without identifying themselves.
Plainclothes agents in at least a dozen cities have arrested migrants who
showed up to their court hearings. And across the U.S., people suspected of
being in the country illegally are disappearing into the federal detention
system without notice to families or lawyers, according to attorneys, witnesses
and officials.
The basic supposition of deploying troops to L.A. is that
Americans won’t care about the means if they value the ends—like suppressing
riots—highly enough. That’s also the supposition underlying ICE gradually
taking on the trappings of a secret-police force. Trump promised mass
deportations as a candidate and the only way to achieve that, he’d have the
country believe, is by demanding as little accountability and due process as
possible from federal immigration agents.
Politics is the art of the possible, limited only by what
the people will tolerate. Trump’s great authoritarian insight is that Americans
will tolerate a lot more than you might think if they’re properly desensitized
to the means and properly inflamed about the ends. If you think there’s a major
public backlash coming to how ICE conducts itself nowadays, let me know where
to place a counter-wager. I’d like some of
that action.
An asymmetry.
Every executive who’s suddenly confronted with a riot has
to balance the same two interests. He needs to restore order to satisfy the
normie majority, but he also needs not to be weirdly oppressive about it. A
too-harsh crackdown might offend elements of his base who sympathize with the
rioters and/or normies who don’t want a second Kent State.
Trump and Newsom each face that dilemma in Los Angeles,
but their incentives aren’t symmetrical.
The governor needs to somehow satisfy a chud left that
relishes violent uprisings for supposedly just causes, mainstream Democrats who
oppose the riots but despise Trump, and a wider public that views his party
with understandable suspicion about
its commitment to law and order after the “defund the
police” nonsense of 2020. If he’s serious about becoming a national candidate
in 2028, he needs to prove that he’s not the caricature of an anti-anti-riot
progressive. That’s a fine line to walk.
The line for the president isn’t as fine because his
coalition isn’t as conflicted as Newsom’s about using force to restore order.
So long as the rioters are left-wingers rather than cop-punching patriots
outside the Capitol, he has an almost entirely free hand from his base to deal
with them as he likes. There may be some point hypothetically at which moderate
Republicans get squeamish about his tactics—an American Tiananmen Square would
no doubt cause Susan Collins “concern”—but cultish authoritarianism means
(almost) never having to say you’re sorry for being rough with undesirables.
Trump just doesn’t need to be as careful with balancing
as Newsom does, which is why he’s free to exploit the L.A. mess for
frog-boiling purposes by irresponsibly pouring in troops. And to threaten
protesters who dare disrupt his big military parade next weekend with, and I quote, “very big
force.”
The question going forward is whether the president’s
actions this week end up influencing how Democrats balance the incentives, and
to whose benefit.
Politico’s “gleeful” source claimed that Trump’s military deployment is about “sending a message to
other governors and other states: Don’t let your cities burn down, because this
will happen to you.” Okay, but what does “this” mean? The sense I get from
Newsom is that he’s greatly enjoying this moment as Trump’s bête
noire, daring Homan to arrest him (“come and get me,
tough guy”) and taunting Republicans with how much higher the murder rates are in their states than
in supposedly unsafe California. Like the right, the left
wants a “fighter.” The governor is showing off his
fighting skills.
No wonder that Kamala Harris broke her post-election
silence and tried to muscle in on Newsom’s spotlight by condemning Trump’s
National Guard deployment. Any Democrat with an eye on 2028 will welcome
the chance to take the lead role in Resistance theater for a few weeks if the
president happens to send the Marines to their home state next.
“That’s exactly what Trump wants, though,” you might say.
“The more he positions himself against the rioters while Democratic politicians
position themselves against him, the more it’ll appear that only he and the
right take crime seriously.”
That’s a risk, sure, but it all depends. If other
Democratic governors heed the advice of Politico’s source and suppress
anti-ICE riots expeditiously, the GOP’s law-and-order advantage will shrink in
2028. Arguably it would have been better for Republicans if Trump had waited to
intervene in L.A., giving Newsom and Bass a chance to fail spectacularly at
restoring order.
Democrats may also get a chance to prove they can walk
and chew gum at the same time. If violence breaks out in Pennsylvania and Gov.
Josh Shapiro does a solid job at cracking down, he’ll be in a strong position
to condemn Trump if/when the president tries to insert federal troops there
too. The clearer it becomes that using the military is an unnecessary display
of the president’s authoritarian ego, the less patience the public will have
for it.
Things could go wrong for him in other ways. We may, in
fact, end up with a Kent State horror somewhere, causing a backlash that shifts
the public’s appetite for military force sharply and suddenly. Or Trump might
overextend the military by sending too many troops to too many cities. When
trying to predict his behavior, overreach is always a safe bet.
This could all backfire in a simpler way. Perhaps Newsom
will gain traction on the left for his Resistance performance this week and
then something will happen that shifts swing voters’ priorities away from
immigration and crime. A nationwide backlash to Trump’s economic policies is
the most likely way that a Democrat becomes president four years from now; if
his behavior this week endears Newsom to his own party, making him the
frontrunner for the nomination in 2028, he’ll be closer to the White House when
this is over than he was a week ago.
Democratic frogs can boil too, you see. As Trump outrages
the left by exploiting riots to stage more authoritarian shows of force,
liberals might become desensitized (or more desensitized) to the
underlying civil unrest—and then, through some quirk of economic or political
fate, those liberals might be back in charge in four years. It would be funny
if the president ended up inadvertently polarizing Democrats into becoming more
callous about riots than they already are. And no, that one’s not ‘ha ha funny’
either.
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