'Time for a change' - Son Heung-min announces Tottenham departure
'Another absolute rocket!' - Watch Son Heung-min's best Tottenham goals
Ukraine says it hit Russian oil facilities, military airfield - Reuters
'India are on top' heading into day three of final Test - Vaughan
'Like being with a rock star' - departing Son's 10 years at Spurs
India will buy Russian oil despite Trump's threats, NYT reports - Reuters
Warner fires Ashes 'surfboard' jibe at England's Root
McIlroy to miss PGA Tour play-off opener
Cuatro años de enfrentamientos de la fiscal del ‘caso Montoro’ con el jefe de Anticorrupción y la Guardia Civil dificultan la investigación
Trump fires US labor official over data and gets earlier than expected chance to reshape Fed - Reuters
Kia America recalls 201,149 US Telluride vehicles - Reuters
Raducanu beaten by Wimbledon finalist Anisimova
Richardson arrested for domestic violence in Seattle, report says - Reuters
I no longer identify as Nigerian, Badenoch says
Ghislaine Maxwell moved to prison camp, Trump says no plea for pardon - Reuters
Víctimas del triple asesino de Madrid liberado por Trump hablan por primera vez: “No podemos entender el silencio de las autoridades”
Los mercados vislumbran ya los estragos de los aranceles de Trump a la economía global
Tres dimisiones en diez días: el escándalo de los políticos y sus falsos y fluctuantes currículos
Salvador Illa se va de veraneo con Pedro Sánchez a Lanzarote antes de la tormenta de septiembre
Nuevo orden comercial mundial
Descubre en Valencia en una caja de zapatos el diario de su padre en la Guerra Civil de la que nunca habló
Steve McCurry, un gran fotógrafo al que le cabrean algunas preguntas: “Has intentado hacer que yo diga alguna tontería”
Javier Ambrossi: “He dudado sobre si solo caía bien Javi y a mí se me tenía que comer con patatas”
Chess grandmaster Carlsen wins at Esports World Cup
Democratic governors advise strong counteroffensive on redistricting
Court allows Trump to end union bargaining for federal workers - Reuters
Trump orders nuclear submarines moved after Russian 'provocative statements' - Reuters
Global stock index sinks with dollar, bond yields after weak US jobs data - Reuters
Kugler resigning from Fed, opening door to Trump appointment - Reuters
She wants Zohran’s seat
Atkinson stars but late drops sees India lead England after day two
Drop, drop, drop - England's poor fielding allows India to build lead
Ook Nederland gaat weer noodhulp afgooien boven Gaza
Top MoD civil servant to leave in wake of Afghan data breach
Cien años de camino de vuelta: cuando los nietos latinos de los emigrantes españoles regresan a Madrid
How to follow Hungarian Grand Prix on the BBC
Norris' openness used against him - Sainz
Civil service interns must be working class, government says
BBB komt met nieuwe kandidatenlijst Tweede Kamer: 'Uit alle provincies'
'Not often you see Root lose his temper' - tensions rise on day two
Labour councillor resigns to help Corbyn's party
Green Party members start choosing new leadership
Labour MP Tulip Siddiq to face trial in Bangladesh
Cooper leads first public poll since jumping in North Carolina Senate race
The nation’s cartoonists on the week in politics
Councillors faced 'stalking and death threats'
Trump’s political operation has stockpiled a massive amount of cash ahead of the midterms
Some Gaza and Ukraine posts blocked under new age checks
A Democrat in the middle of the Israel firestorm
Elon Musk gave Trump and the GOP $15M even as he was fighting with the president
Lib Dems call for cap on SEND school profits
Adams, Cuomo, Mamdani and Sliwa pay their respects
Title will come down to fewest mistakes - Norris
Small boats crossings hit 25,000 for the year
'Overcorrections': McBride on some Democrats' remarks on transgender people | The Conversation
Verstappen says he will race with Red Bull in 2026
Minister says lawyers missing the point on Palestinian recognition
Ofcom investigates 34 porn sites over age checks
Andrew Benson Q&A: Send us your questions
The shockingly shrunken footprint of a former president
Team principal Vasseur signs new Ferrari deal
Meta profits surge helps drive Zuckerberg’s AI ambitions
What screen time does to children's brains is more complicated than it seems
The Gulf bets big on AI as it seeks the 'new oil'
NSC-Kamerlid Joseph stapt per direct over naar BBB
TikTok removes video by Huda Beauty boss over anti-Israel conspiracy theories
APPLE 202.38 −3.19%
Mittal 26.76 −2.76%
BESI 117.15 −1.64%
BERKHATH 472.84 −0.66%
BYD 117.20 −3.06%
ESSILOR 255.30 −2.03%
FAGRON 21.20 −2.53%
NVIDIA 173.72 −3.10%
SHELL 31.20 −0.94%
SAMSUNG 69,000.00 −4.96%
SOFTBANK 11,580.00 −1.95%
TMSC 1,140.00 −1.72%
TESLA 302.63 −5.14%

In a dramatic escalation of tensions, California has become a flashpoint in the national debate over immigration enforcement, with protests raging across Los Angeles in response to aggressive Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids. President Donald Trump, doubling down on his hardline immigration stance, deployed 2,000 California National Guard troops to the city on June 8, 2025, overriding the explicit objections of Governor Gavin Newsom, who condemned the move as “purposefully inflammatory” and a “serious breach of state sovereignty.” This unprecedented federal action has ignited a firestorm of criticism, raised legal questions, and deepened the divide between state and federal leadership, all while protesters clash with law enforcement in the streets.

The unrest began on June 7, 2025, following a series of large-scale ICE operations across Los Angeles County, targeting areas like the fashion district and a Home Depot in Paramount, a known hiring spot for day laborers. According to the Department of Homeland Security, ICE detained over 150 undocumented immigrants in the initial sweeps, with a weeklong tally surpassing 100 arrests, some involving individuals with prior criminal histories, though others were legally present residents. Protesters, many waving Mexican flags and chanting “ICE out of L.A.!” took to the streets, decrying what they see as indiscriminate and terrorizing tactics. Clashes erupted in Paramount and Compton, where demonstrators set a car ablaze, tossed concrete projectiles, and faced tear gas, flash-bang grenades, and rubber bullets from law enforcement, including the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department and Border Patrol agents. The Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) reported 39 arrests over the weekend, with Chief Jim McDonnell noting the protests had “gotten out of control,” though he insisted the LAPD responded within 38 minutes despite traffic and crowd challenges.

On Saturday, June 8, 2025, President Trump signed a presidential memorandum, invoking Title 10 of the U.S. Code to federalize 2,000 California National Guard troops, citing “incidents of violence and disorder” as a “form of rebellion” against federal authority. The White House, through Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, justified the deployment, claiming “violent mobs” attacked ICE officers and that California’s “feckless Democrat leaders” failed to protect citizens. Troops began arriving Sunday, stationed around federal buildings and detention centers, though they largely refrained from direct engagement with protesters. This marks a rare instance of a president overriding a governor’s authority to deploy the state’s National Guard, a move not seen since 1965, when President Lyndon B. Johnson sent troops to protect civil rights marchers in Alabama, per the Brennan Center for Justice.

Governor Newsom, a Democrat, fiercely opposed the deployment, calling it “unlawful and immoral” and announcing on June 9, 2025, that California would sue the Trump administration. “Trump is sending 2,000 National Guard troops into LA County—not to meet an unmet need, but to manufacture a crisis,” Newsom posted on X, urging protesters to “stay peaceful” and not “give them a spectacle.” He argued local authorities, including the LAPD and California Highway Patrol, had the situation under control, a claim echoed by Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, who called the federal move a provocation to “enflame tensions.” Newsom’s office highlighted the California Values Act (SB 54), a sanctuary law barring local law enforcement from aiding ICE, underscoring the state’s commitment to shielding immigrants. The governor’s lawsuit challenges the federalization as a violation of state sovereignty, a debate now poised to test the limits of Title 10 and the Posse Comitatus Act, which restricts federal troops from domestic law enforcement.

The deployment has split reactions along party lines. Republicans like Representative Darrell Issa criticized Newsom and Bass, alleging they let “Los Angeles burn” and defend sanctuary policies that hinder ICE. Vice President JD Vance and senior aide Stephen Miller branded the protests a “violent insurrection,” amplifying Trump’s narrative. Meanwhile, Democrats, including Rep. Nanette Barragán and former Vice President Kamala Harris, condemned the move as a fearmongering tactic to “spread panic and division.” Protesters, organized by groups like the Party for Socialism and Liberation, rallied at City Hall on June 9, 2025, decrying ICE’s actions as an “authoritarian assault” on immigrant communities vital to California’s economy.

This clash is more than a local skirmish—it’s a microcosm of Trump’s aggressive second-term immigration crackdown, aiming to deport thousands daily and expand ICE detention capacity to 100,000. The heavy-handed response risks alienating a state where Hispanics and foreign-born residents form a significant demographic, per census data. While Trump’s supporters see this as decisive law-and-order action, critics argue it’s a reckless overreach, inflaming tensions and undermining trust. As protests continue and legal battles loom, California stands at the epicenter of a defining national struggle—one where the balance of power, human rights, and democratic norms hang in the balance.

  • The Runway AI Film Festival, featuring finalists displayed on IMAX screens nationwide, has sparked a discussion not just about the potential of AI in filmmaking, but about the deeper implications of financial speculation in the arts. As AI-generated content gains market traction, it raises questions about whether such works truly enrich our cultural landscape or merely inflate market bubbles.

    Read more …