When President Trump authorized a federal law enforcement surge in Washington, D.C., critics wasted no time. They called it federal overreach. They warned about masked agents. They cried about home rule. What they failed to mention is that Ward leaders in D.C. had already asked for help under the Biden administration. Nothing was done.
So Trump delivered what they requested — and the results speak louder than the rhetoric.
The Numbers Don’t Lie
- Carjackings down nearly 90%.
- Robberies down about 60%.
- Overall violent crime down more than 25%.
- Gun crimes dropped sharply.
Mayor Muriel Bowser herself called these “precipitous declines,” crediting the 500 additional federal officerssupporting MPD. In neighborhoods hit hardest — particularly Black communities in Southeast — residents didn’t complain. They welcomed it. Why? Because when crime is out of control, safety matters more than politics.
The Misconception About Black Communities and Police
One of the biggest misconceptions in America is that Black people don’t want police in their neighborhoods. That is false. Black residents want police — but they want professional, competent, and respectful police.
The problem in many cities, often under Black mayors, is not that police are “unwanted.” It’s that departments are dysfunctional, understaffed, and overworked, with little meaningful outreach to the community. Residents are left with the worst of both worlds: not enough officers to keep them safe, and not enough leadership to make policing accountable and effective.
D.C.’s surge revealed the truth: when professional policing is visible and crime falls, people feel relief. The opposition came from politicians, not from the residents who have to live with daily violence.
Outcomes vs. Excuses
This is the lesson every high-crime city should pay attention to. For years, leaders in Chicago, Baltimore, Philadelphia, and St. Louis have delivered speeches about “root causes” while their residents bury loved ones. In D.C., the surge showed what happens when you stop talking and start enforcing the law: crime falls.
The excuse that enforcement “doesn’t work” collapses when you look at the numbers. Enforcement works. What fails is leadership that cares more about appearances than results.
The Politics of Hypocrisy
Let’s be honest. Under Biden, local leaders asked for federal help and got silence. Under Trump, they got action — but suddenly, action became “overreach.” That’s not logic. That’s politics. And the victims of violent crime don’t have time for political games.
When people are afraid to walk home, when carjackings make national headlines, when parents can’t let their kids play outside, they don’t care if help comes from city hall, the state, or the federal government. They care that it comes.
The Trust Factor
Of course, there are real issues to manage. Masked agents, ICE involvement, and blurred lines between local and federal police fueled mistrust. Any city considering a surge must learn from this: enforcement must be transparent, targeted, and accountable. Fear of police should never replace fear of criminals.
The Broader Lesson
What D.C. proves is this:
- A surge can bring immediate stability.
- Federal support can act as a force multiplier.
- But long-term safety requires local investment in police, prosecutors, and courts.
For cities drowning in violence, the choice is clear. You can argue about jurisdiction, ideology, and appearances — or you can prioritize outcomes. D.C.’s experience shows that when the will exists, crime can be reduced. Fast.
Final Word
America’s high-crime cities should take note: results matter more than rhetoric. Black communities don’t hate police. They hate bad policing. What they want — and deserve — is safety, professionalism, and respect. If local leaders won’t deliver that, then they can expect residents to welcome whoever does.