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Demonstrators hold signs and called for an end to the deployment of National Guard troops in Washington, D.C., September 6, 2025. /VCG
Several thousand protesters marched in Washington, D.C. on Saturday to demand that U.S. President Donald Trump end the deployment of National Guard troops patrolling the capital city's streets.
With Trump vowing crackdowns in other Democratic-led cities as well, he appeared to threaten Chicago with migrant deportations in a social media post with an image that parodied the 1979 Vietnam war movie ‘Apocalypse Now.’
Protesters gathered in the nation's capital today to raise their voices against the federal government's efforts to increase control over the city's police department in Washington, D.C., September 6, 2025. /VCG
Protesters at the "We Are All D.C." march, including undocumented immigrants and supporters of Palestinian statehood, chanted slogans denouncing Trump and carried posters, some of which read, "Trump must go now," "Free DC" and "Resist Tyranny."
"I'm here to protest the occupation of D.C.," said Alex Laufer. "We're opposing the authoritarian regime and we need to get the federal police and the National Guard off our streets."
Claiming that crime was blighting the city, Trump deployed the troops last month to "re-establish law, order, and public safety."
Trump also placed the capital district's Metropolitan Police Department under direct federal control and sent federal law enforcement personnel, including members of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), to police the city's streets, moves critics have decried as federal overreach.
Trump said on Tuesday that he would also deploy National Guard troops to fight crime in Chicago, an extraordinary effort to militarize the country's third-largest city that was likely to trigger a legal battle with local officials.
Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker said after Trump spoke that he had learned from reporters that the administration has "gathered ICE agents and military."
More than 2,000 troops, including six Republican-led states, are patrolling the city. It is unclear when their mission will end, though the army this week extended orders for the D.C. National Guard through November 30.
Washington D.C. Attorney General Brian Schwalb filed a lawsuit on Thursday seeking to block the troop deployment, arguing that it was unconstitutional and violated multiple federal laws.
Trump was playing golf at his course outside Washington and was not at the White House when protesters marched past on Saturday.
But he appeared to step up pressure on Chicago in a post on his Truth Social platform that said, "I love the smell of deportations in the morning," parodying a line from the 1979 movie.
"Chicago about to find out why it's called the Department of WAR,” the president wrote, referring to his new order to rename the Department of Defense.