


The meaning of the protests in Los Angeles
Donald Trump’s provocation could change LA, California and perhaps the entire country
THE MOOD changed by the moment. On June 8th a woman hugged her two young daughters on a bridge overlooking the 101 freeway in downtown Los Angeles. Vendors sold Mexican flags and protesters adjusted the rhythms of their chants. “Move ICE get out the way” morphed into “Donald Trump, let’s be clear, immigrants are welcome here”. It felt like a neighbourhood block party—if block parties encouraged graffiti. But chants turned to screams as police exploded flash-bang grenades to clear the road. The two young girls grimaced and hustled away. California Highway Patrol officers paced in riot gear, their less-lethal weapons aimed at the crowd. Some protesters lobbed bottles at police, who dodged the projectiles. Nearby, several Waymo driverless cars were set aflame.
Explore more

Donald Trump can call in the troops
His authority is broad even if his actions are inflammatory

Is there a “woke right” in America?
Conservatives don’t like being compared to the liberals they despise

Donald Trump’s new travel ban is coming into effect
It will probably stand up in court
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 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