


Sending the National Guard to LA is not about stopping rioting
The city is being punished for resisting the Trump administration’s deportation efforts
DONALD TRUMP is making good on his threats. During his presidential campaign and first few months in office the president and his advisers suggested that they would retaliate against cities that resist the mass deportation of illegal immigrants. On June 7th Mr Trump ordered at least 2,000 National Guard troops to Los Angeles to quell protests that had taken place across the region for two days following several immigration raids, and the disorder that followed. The move is ostensibly meant to restore peace. But it is also a thinly-veiled message to Democratic-run places that retribution awaits those who would stand between immigrants and the administration’s deportation machine.
Explore more

Donald Trump has many ways to hurt Elon Musk
The incentives for Mr Musk to make up with the president are powerful

What a New Jersey election says about MAGA America
Republican moderates have converted and Democrats are divided

California’s carbon market reaches an inflection point
With ramifications for the West Coast and beyond
Pete Hegseth once scared America’s allies. Now he reassures them
The defence secretary is a MAGA radical at home but a globalist abroad
Police are cracking down on cyclists in New York City
The lycra-clad are getting swept up in problems around e-bikes
Meet SCOTUSbot, our AI tool to predict Supreme Court rulings
Impending decisions will be a test of our model