Congress did not extend President Donald Trump鈥檚 Aug. 11 order that federalized the city鈥檚 police force and launched a surge of law enforcement into the city. But the National Guard and some other federal agencies will continue their deployment, and it鈥檚 not clear when that might end.
Also, this measure of control the city may be regaining comes the same day a House committee begins debating 13 bills that, if approved, would wrest away even more of the city鈥檚 governing ability.
Trump鈥檚 takeover of Washington, D.C.鈥檚 policing and Wednesday鈥檚 discussions by the House underscore how interlinked the nation鈥檚 capital is with the federal government and how much the city鈥檚 capacity to govern is beholden to federal decisions.
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White House looks to include DC funding fix in gov鈥檛 funding bill
The District of Columbia鈥檚 budget would get a boost under changes the White House is seeking as part of a stop-gap spending measure Congress must pass this month to avoid a government shutdown.
In March, Congress omitted standard language regarding the city鈥檚 budget, which resulted in the District keeping funding at 2024 levels. At the time, city officials projected the omission would lead to significant cuts to police, education and other services.
The White House request just submitted to Congress clarifies the district has the authority to spend in fiscal year 2026 the money it raises through local taxes.
The request is part of an 18-page list of adjustments that the White House wants including in any stopgap funding bill. It鈥檚 a positive signal for the district after the Republican-led House had declined for months to take up a DC funding fix.
Senate Democrats to force vote on releasing Epstein files
Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer is forcing a vote on a measure to force the Department of Justice to release the case files on the late Jeffrey Epstein.
Schumer, a New York Democrat, is proposing an amendment to the Senate鈥檚 annual military authorization bill that would force Attorney General Pam Bondi to release the Epstein files. Congressional Democrats have been hammering on the issue for weeks as President Donald Trump has resisted releasing the information.
鈥淲e鈥檙e going to keep fighting until these files are fully released,鈥 Schumer said in a video on social media shortly after he filed the amendment.
The Senate will vote on the defense bill this week, but the timing of the vote on Schumer鈥檚 amendment was unclear.
Trump offers curious first take on Russian drone incursion in Poland鈥檚 air space
鈥淲hat鈥檚 with Russia violating Poland鈥檚 airspace with drones? Here we go!鈥 Trump said in a posting on his Truth Social platform late Wednesday morning.
White House officials did not immediately respond to queries about Trump鈥檚 first comments after Poland announced that several Russian drones entered its territory over the course of many hours and were shot down with help from NATO allies.
Trump was scheduled to speak on Wednesday with Polish President Karol Nawrocki.
Trump is set to host a dinner for Cabinet and White House staff
The president on Wednesday night is hosting the second gathering at what he鈥檚 dubbed the 鈥淩ose Garden Club,鈥 where he paved over the lawn of the White House Rose Garden and installed tables and chairs.
Wednesday鈥檚 guests are set to include members of the president鈥檚 Cabinet and White House staff, according to two White House officials who were not authorized to speak publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.
Last week, Trump hosted Republican members of Congress in the space for a dinner.
Democrats critique administration shuttering gun violence prevention programs while issuing an anti-crime crackdown
Democratic Rep. Lateefah Simon, who represents Oakland, Calif., critiqued the White House for shuttering its Office of Gun Violence prevention and ceasing funds for some community service programs meant to promote public safety with precautionary measures.
鈥淚f we want safe communities, we will fully fund teachers in the city of Washington, DC, there are a limited amount of fully funded services for young people with mental health issues, so let鈥檚 fully fund that,鈥 Simon said. 鈥淟et鈥檚 fully fund job programs for every young person.鈥
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 incarcerate your way out of out of substance abuse disorder,鈥 said Democratic Rep. Wesley Bell, who represents Ferguson, Mo. Bell introduced an amendment that would boost funding for addiction remediation programs and other anti-crime efforts.
鈥淚f you send somebody with mental health to jail, they鈥檙e just going to come out with a worse problem and they鈥檙e likely to graduate to violent crime.鈥
Republicans: Vote out Democrats after Charlotte train stabbing
Republicans in Charlotte say the signals it鈥檚 long past time local residents vote out Democrats leading North Carolina鈥檚 largest city. GOP candidates for mayor and city council joined state party officials for a news conference at a light rail station the day after the city鈥檚 primary election.
Police say Iryna Zarutska was fatally stabbed on a train Aug. 22. A man with a lengthy criminal record has been charged with murder.
Four-term Democratic Mayor Vi Lyles and will face Republican Terrie Donovan in November鈥檚 general election. Republicans have accused Lyles and other Democrats of failing to keep the transit system safe and for other loose criminal justice policies.
鈥淭his is no longer a matter of voting red or voting blue. This is a matter of voting for common sense,鈥 Donovan said at the news conference. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 just deserve change, we demand change.鈥
There hasn鈥檛 been a GOP mayor in Charlotte since 2009. Success for Donovan and other GOP candidates likely will depend on the city鈥檚 large bloc of unaffiliated voters.
鈥榊ou are living in a city filled with crime,鈥 Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene tells DC residents
She told dozens of Washington residents attending the hearing that safety concerns justify expanding military deployments in cities across the country, following Trump鈥檚 surge of federal troops and law enforcement agents into the nation鈥檚 capital.
鈥淵ou know it because in your communities, you know people and you witness it, there鈥檚 drive by shootings, there鈥檚 drug deals, and the youths of this community are being done wrong, absolutely being done wrong,鈥 the Georgia Republican said, repeating dystopian rhetoric about public safety in the capital and other cities.
鈥淎nd I, 100%, and some of my colleagues, 100% support the use of the National Guard to clean up the crime and stop the criminals from murdering and raping and stealing and making cities unsafe,鈥 said Greene. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 the reality of where we are today. And so this debate can continue back and forth, but it is ridiculous. Fighting for criminals is a losing argument.鈥
Democrat calls his GOP colleagues 鈥榣apdogs鈥 for Trump in tense exchange
鈥淭his body is full of lap dogs doing exactly what the President wants, when he wants. It鈥檚 not pushing back,鈥 said Rep. Maxwell Frost, a Florida Democrat and the youngest member of Congress.
Frost accused his Republican colleagues on the Oversight Committee of hypocrisy as they try to undo home rule in the nation鈥檚 capital, contrary to GOP rhetoric about 鈥渁 party that鈥檚 supposed to be about states鈥 rights and local rule and people the consent of the governed, which is fundamental to our Constitution and this country.鈥
Frost then called for DC statehood, saying city residents 鈥渨ant to be represented by the government that they pay taxes to.鈥
Several dozen attendees wearing 鈥淔REE DC鈥 shirts and hats clapped and cheered at his remarks.
DC鈥檚 representative accuses GOP of lying about nation鈥檚 capital
Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton, DC鈥檚 non-voting member of Congress, said that several bills being debated on the House Oversight Committee would limit Washington鈥檚 ability to govern itself in the limited manner afforded to it by federal law.
鈥淭his bill disparages DC and perpetuates the misinformation and disinformation the Trump administration and Republicans in Congress have spread about the safety and beauty of DC,鈥 Norton said. 鈥淚 encourage tourists to continue to visit DC, and businesses and people to continue to move this wonderful city. DC is a world-class city, full stop.鈥
Comer said the 鈥淢ake the District of Columbia Safe and Beautiful Act鈥 would benefit residents by establishing a commission charged with administering the city. The legislation also would codify Trump鈥檚 executive order federalizing the city鈥檚 police force and supplant municipal policies.
Republicans justify DC crackdown by highlighting city鈥檚 unique constitutional status
Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser and congressional Democrats have called for greater autonomy 鈥 and voting rights in Congress. But House Republicans say the Constitution provided otherwise.
鈥淭here is no other municipality addressed in Article I, Section VIII of the Constitution,鈥 said Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona. He argued that residents should understand and accept the city鈥檚 unique constitutional situation. 鈥淵ou chose to live in it,鈥 he said.
GOP says DC residents don鈥檛 need more representation
鈥淚t was clearly recognized that DC was going to have a unique role to play for the entire republic and the citizens of the envisioned capital would enjoy a special access to government to be uniquely represented,鈥 said Rep. Clay Higgins, a Louisiana Republican.
The District of Columbia is a federal district. While Congress delegated much of the city鈥檚 day-to-day operational authority to the local government under the Home Rule Act of 1973, Congress reserves the power to reinforce its authority over the city, and federal laws passed by Congress itself govern how interventions by Capitol Hill or the White House are carried out.
This access to lawmakers effectively removed the residents鈥 need for other forms of representation, Higgins argued. 鈥淭his is the way the nation鈥檚 capital governance was envisioned.鈥
Oversight Committee begins debate on home rule in District of Columbia
Oversight Chairman James Comer accused local officials of allowing crime to 鈥渇lourish鈥 in Washington, D.C. before opening debate on 鈥渟everal pieces of legislation to reinforce President Trump鈥檚 efforts to make Washington, D.C. safe again.鈥
Ranking member Robert Garcia, a Democrat, called it a 鈥渂latant power grab鈥 by Republicans who are 鈥渉ijacking authority鈥 from local leaders and residents.
The Oversight Committee is working a slate of bills related to D.C. that it aims to send to the GOP-led House for votes.
Democrats say North Carolina Republicans share blame for deadly violence
They say the GOP is misleading the public while failing to support law enforcement with more funding in a state budget that the Republican-controlled General Assembly was supposed to approve months ago.
The U.S. Senate campaign of Democrat Roy Cooper points to what it considers his long history fighting crime as governor and attorney general.
Cooper鈥檚 likely Senate rival, the former Republican National Committee chairman Michael Whatley, tried to link the violence to Cooper鈥檚 creation of a task force on solutions to racial bias in the criminal justice system. But Cooper never gave the task force any authority to release state prisoners.
Charlotte, NC, mayor says Republicans must help provide solutions
Mayor Vi Lyles posted an open letter on social media late Monday, calling the refugee鈥檚 death a 鈥渢ragic failure by the courts and magistrates.鈥
鈥淥ur police officers arrest people only to have them quickly released, which undermines our ability to protect our community and ensure safety,鈥 Lyles added. 鈥淲e need a bipartisan solution to address repeat offenders who do not face consequences for their actions and those who cannot get treatment for their mental illness and are allowed to be on the streets.鈥
Caine sees 鈥榓 lot of frothiness鈥 in global security
Caine told attendees at the Billington Cybersecurity Summit in Washington that there are a 鈥渘umber of serious and simultaneous events鈥 including conflicts in the Middle East and Ukraine and escalating and the . With such upheaval in the world, sharing information is even more critical, he said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 always been a frustration from our allies and partners, and understandably so,鈥 Caine said of the flow of defense information from the U.S. 鈥淚 think we鈥檙e doing a good job at that. We could always do better.鈥
Caine told the crowd of mostly tech industry insiders that the Pentagon must also improve its relationship with the private sector to make it easier for start-ups and established companies to do business with the government, and to ensure America鈥檚 military is equipped with the latest technology.
Top US military officer says rising conflicts demonstrate need for US partnerships
Air Force Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, says the U.S. must improve its sharing of intelligence and information with key allies as global tensions rise and America鈥檚 adversaries grow more technologically sophisticated.
Caine was speaking at a cybersecurity conference on Wednesday when he said the U.S. and its allies have improved their technical cooperation in the face of threats from China, Russia and Iran.
But technological innovations by adversaries as well as enhanced cyber threats show more must be done, Caine said. Autonomous systems, cyber warfare and artificial intelligence mean information about weapons, tactics and capabilities is more important than ever, he said.
Trump wants 鈥榠nappropriate鈥 material removed from national parks
The National Park Service had until July 18 to flag 鈥渋nappropriate鈥 signs, exhibits and other material, according to a document shared with the AP by the National Parks Conservation Association, which obtained internal information from an anonymous source within the Interior Department. The public was also encouraged to participate.
And the administration said it would remove all 鈥渋nappropriate鈥 material by Sept. 17, according to , citing internal agency documents.
鈥淧retending that the bad stuff never happened is not going to make it go away,鈥 said Alan Spears, a senior director with the National Parks Conservation Association, a nonpartisan group separate from the national parks system that advocates for it. 鈥淲e need to be able to talk about these things if we鈥檙e going to have any hope of bringing people together.鈥
鈻 Here鈥檚
From slavery to pollution, National Park employees flagged material deemed 鈥榙isparaging鈥
Does the Everglades National Park represent a slight to development in America? Does mentioning missionaries, who sought to destroy the language and culture of Alaska Natives, cast American history in a negative light? How about the memoir of an enslaved girl for sale in a park鈥檚 bookstore?
These are some of dozens of items National Park Service employees flagged as potentially 鈥渄isparaging鈥 to Americans, according to screenshots shared with The Associated Press.
that 鈥渋nappropriately disparage Americans past or living,鈥 and instead 鈥渇ocus on the greatness of the achievements and progress of the American people or, with respect to natural features, the beauty, abundance, and grandeur of the American landscape.鈥
Transportation secretary announces security probe of Charlotte, NC, trains after killing
Sean Duffy also threatened to pull federal funding if his department鈥檚 investigation finds security problems in the North Carolina city鈥檚 mass transit system.
Duffy and Trump are pointing to last month鈥檚 killing of Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska on a train last month as evidence that cities led by Democrats aren鈥檛 doing enough to combat crime.
Duffy blamed her death on the 鈥渟oft on crime policies鈥 of local leaders and said this continues to put the traveling public at risk. His department said there have been six attacks on transit workers in Charlotte this year, up from just one last year, and higher than the national average.
Teachers unions sue Trump administration over immigration enforcement
Two unions representing millions of school employees nationwide are joining a federal court challenge of the Trump administration, saying immigration arrests near schools are terrorizing children and teachers, leading some students to drop out.
A day after he took office, Trump rescinded a Department of Homeland Security memo that urged immigration agents to steer clear of schools and churches.
The American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association say the move was illegal. The unions are joining an ongoing lawsuit filed by a farmworker union and a group of churches. The amended lawsuit was filed Tuesday in a federal court in Eugene, Oregon.
Trump to speak with Polish leader
The U.S. president will speak on Wednesday with Polish President Karol Nawrocki, according to a White House official who was not authorized to speak publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.
Trump has not yet made any public comments yet about that violated its airspace.
Lisa Cook to remain Fed governor for now, despite Trump’s efforts to fire her
The ruling Tuesday by a federal judge, which almost certainly will be appealed, is a blow to the Trump administration鈥檚 efforts to assert more control over the U.S. central bank, which is traditionally independent from day-to-day politics so that it can better achieve its congressionally mandated goals of stable prices and maximum employment.
U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb ruled that Cook鈥檚 challenge would likely prevail. A Trump appointee accused Cook of mortgage fraud, saying she simultaneously claimed two properties she bought before joining the Fed were her 鈥減rimary residences,鈥 which could have resulted in lower down payments and mortgage rates.
But the judge said such allegations don’t legally justify her firing, since by law, Fed governors can only be removed 鈥渇or cause,鈥 which Cobb said was limited to actions taken during a governor鈥檚 time in office.
US producer prices unexpectedly fell last month, Labor Department says
The department鈥檚 producer price index 鈥 which captures in the supply chain before it hits consumers 鈥 showed that wholesale inflation decelerated by 0.1% in August after advancing 0.7% in July. It鈥檚 a possible sign that retailers and wholesalers are absorbing the cost of Trump鈥檚 sweeping taxes on imports, and it makes it even more likely that the Fed will cut its benchmark interest rate next week for the first time this year.
Excluding volatile food and energy prices, so-called core producer prices also fell 0.1% from July and were up 2.8% from a year earlier.
The numbers were lower than economists had forecast. Trump鈥檚 tariffs were widely expected to send prices higher, but so far their impact has been muted. 鈥淭he big picture remains that tariff effects are feeding through only slowly,鈥欌 economist Stephen Brown of Capital Economics wrote in a commentary.
Florida Democrat Jenkins challenges Republican Moody for US Senate
A Democratic former school board member who garnered attention for defeating a future cofounder of has announced her 2026 bid for the U.S. Senate in Florida.
Jennifer Jenkins unseated Tina Descovich on the Brevard County School Board in 2020 in a county that had carried by nearly 20 points. Now she鈥檚 challenging Republican Sen. , who faces a special election to hold on to her seat after Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis to succeed , who was tapped by Trump to become secretary of state.
鈥淎shley Moody doesn鈥檛 know what it鈥檚 like to struggle paying for food, housing, health care and day care. But I do,鈥 Jenkins said in a campaign launch video.
Trump calls for death penalty for suspect in Charlotte train killing
The president in a post on his social media network Wednesday morning referred to the suspect in on a train in Charlotte, N.C. as an 鈥淎NIMAL鈥 and said he should be tried quickly 鈥渁nd only awarded THE DEATH PENALTY.鈥
鈥淭here can be no other option!!!鈥 he wrote.
The suspect, Decarlos Brown Jr., had served time in prison, been briefly committed for schizophrenia and was arrested earlier this year after repeatedly calling 911 from a hospital. Then a judge released him without bail.
The Supreme Court to consider Trump’s tariffs power
The justices will hear the case in November, a lightning-fast timetable by the court鈥檚 typical pace. The tariffs will stay in place in the meantime.
The court agreed to take up an appeal from the Trump administration after lower courts found most of his tariffs illegal. The small businesses and states that challenged the tariffs on goods from almost every country in the world say they have driven businesses nearly to bankruptcy.
Trump weighs in on Israeli strike in Qatar
Trying to walk a delicate line following Israel鈥檚 attack on Hamas officials in Doha, he said he was 鈥渘ot thrilled鈥 about the strike while stopping short of condemning Israel for carrying out an audacious military operation on the soil of another major U.S. ally.
Qatar has played a key role mediating between the U.S. and Iran and its proxies, including during talks with Tehran-backed Hamas as the war with Israel in Gaza grinds on.
鈻 Read more about Trump, Qatar and Israel
Trump asserts that his Epstein connections are a 鈥檇ead issue鈥
After House Democrats released a picture of a birthday message, which features the drawing of a curvaceous woman, purportedly signed by Trump for Jeffrey Epstein, Republicans rushed to support the president鈥檚 assertions that he had nothing to do with the letter.
Trump on Tuesday said he wouldn鈥檛 鈥渃omment on something that鈥檚 a dead issue.鈥 Trump sued the Wall Street Journal and its owner over a report that described such a page in detail.
US Secretary of State to meet with his South Korean counterpart following raid
The meeting between Marco Rubio and South Korea鈥檚 Foreign Minister Cho Hyun is set for the White House Wednesday morning.
A total of 475 workers, more than 300 of them South Koreans, were rounded up in the Sept. 4 raid at the battery factory under construction at Hyundai鈥檚 sprawling auto plant west of Savannah. Some were shown being shackled with chains around their hands, ankles and waists in video released by U.S. authorities.
Hyun traveled to Washington tasked with bringing them home. South Korean media reported that a charter plane left for the U.S. to bring them back.