California Governor Gavin Newsom has raised sharp concerns about crime in America. He said that crime is not just a problem in large cities run by Democrats but is even worse in some states governed by Republicans. Speaking at a press event, Newsom pointed to data showing that certain Republican-led states face much higher murder rates than California and other Democratic areas.
Newsom Points to Crime Data in Republican States
Governor made these remarks while announcing the expansion of a program in California that uses state law enforcement officers to target violent crime. He compared his own plan with President Donald Trump’s recent move to send federal forces and National Guard troops into Democratic-run cities. Newsom described that step as a form of militarization and called it dangerous.
Governor Newsom held up printed fliers during the event. These showed faces of Republican leaders alongside crime statistics from their states. He highlighted Louisiana as an example, noting that the murder rate there is nearly four times higher than California’s. According to recent figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Louisiana had 19.3 homicide deaths per 100,000 people in 2023. California, on the other hand, had only 5.1.
Newsom also pointed to Mississippi, Arkansas, and Missouri, where violent crime rates are much higher than the national average. He said that if President Trump was truly serious about crime, then he would be sending troops into those states as well.
Governor argued that Trump is unfairly targeting Democratic-led cities while ignoring violence in Republican-led regions. He called it blatant hypocrisy and suggested that politics, not safety, was driving the federal actions.
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Newsom Criticizes Federal Troop Deployments
President Trump has already sent National Guard troops and federal law enforcement officers to Washington, D.C., and has promised similar deployments to Chicago. He says the goal is to curb violent crime and restore law and order.
But Governor Gavin Newsom warned that this approach amounts to militarizing American cities. He said the president is acting on communities rather than with them. Newsom described it as a top-down use of force that does not solve the root causes of violence.
Newsom also pointed to an ongoing legal challenge against the deployment of federal troops in Los Angeles. That case is tied to the Posse Comitatus Act, a federal law that limits the use of the U.S. military in civilian policing. Governor Newsom suggested that the court’s upcoming decision could have far-reaching consequences for how and when a president can use troops inside the country.
At the event, Newsom criticized what he called authoritarian actions and said the country should not normalize military patrols on city streets. He noted that many communities of color already feel targeted and racially profiled. The governor argued that sending armed troops into neighborhoods would only deepen fear and distrust.
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Newsom Highlights California’s Crime Strategy
While the White House defends the troop deployments, Governor Gavin Newsom presented California’s alternative approach. He said that California is tackling crime by expanding its own crime suppression program, which deploys the California Highway Patrol to more cities. This, he said, is being done in partnership with local agencies, not by force.
Newsom emphasized that his state values working together with federal law enforcement agencies such as the FBI, DEA, and Justice Department under past administrations. These collaborations, he explained, are effective because they are based on cooperation, not confrontation.
Governor Newsom, however, pushed back strongly. He said he is showing the country the real facts about crime rates. Newsom also insisted that California’s strategies prove that communities can be safer without turning cities into militarized zones.
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He ended his remarks by questioning whether America is losing sight of its own values. Newsom said the issue is not just about crime statistics but also about protecting democracy and ensuring people feel safe without fear of being treated as enemies in their own streets.