1 Sep 2025

Political standoff intensifies over Trump's plans for Chicago crackdown

7:23 am on 1 September 2025

By Ted Hesson, Reuters

US President Donald Trump attends the inaugural Pennsylvania Energy and Innovation Summit on the campus of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on July 15, 2025. (Photo by ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP)

US President Donald Trump plans to "crack down" on crime and illegal immigration in Chicago. (File photo) Photo: AFP

  • Noem promises more federal officers in Chicago, declines details
  • Pritzker accuses Trump of election manipulation motives
  • Chicago Mayor Johnson opposes federal troop assistance

A political standoff over US President Donald Trump's plan to crack down on crime and illegal immigration in Chicago intensified on Sunday as a top administration official promised to deploy more federal officers and the Democratic governor of Illinois portrayed Trump as a threat to democracy.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem told CBS News' 'Face the Nation' that US Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations in Chicago and other parts of the country would be bolstered, but declined to provide details.

Noem said Trump would make any decision to deploy National Guard troops.

On the same program, Illinois Governor JB Pritzker said Trump wanted to deploy troops so that he could halt or manipulate US midterm elections in 2026.

Illinois Governor JB Pritzker speaks as he takes a Chicago water taxi from Michigan Avenue stop, on the way to a press conference in Chicago, Illinois, on August 25, 2025. (Photo by KAMIL KRZACZYNSKI / AFP)

Illinois Governor JB Pritzker. (File photo) Photo: KAMIL KRZACZYNSKI

"He'd like to stop the elections in 2026 or, frankly, take control of those elections," Pritzker said.

"He'll just claim that there's some problem with an election, and then he's got troops on the ground that can take control."

White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson criticised Pritzker for not doing more to deal with crime.

"Chicago's residents would be much safer if Pritzker actually did his job and addressed his crime problem instead of trying to be a Resistance Lib hero," Jackson said in a statement.

Trump and top officials have said in the past week that Chicago would soon be a target for the Republican president's efforts to tackle crime and illegal immigration.

Trump for years has criticised crime in Chicago, a Democratic stronghold, although city figures show most categories of violent crime have dropped this year.

Earlier this month, Trump kicked off an aggressive public safety campaign in Washington, DC, deploying National Guard troops, flooding streets with federal officers, and federalising the city police department.

Members of the National Guard patrol outside of Union Station in Washington DC,  on 21 August, 2025.

The National Guard in Washington. (File photo) Photo: AFP

The surge has generated political and community pushback in DC, a federal district where Trump wields exceptional power.

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, a Democrat, issued an executive order on Saturday that said local police would not assist with National Guard or other federal operations.

Noem said that Trump's decision to send thousands of National Guard troops to Los Angeles in June following protests saved that Democrat-led city from being decimated.

"LA wouldn't be standing today if President Trump hadn't taken action," Noem said.

"That city would have burned down if left to the devices of the mayor and the governor of that state."

California Governor Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, said at the time that the decision was "purposefully inflammatory."

Reuters reported previously that as Trump began his push to send the National Guard and Marines to US cities, military leaders privately questioned whether the troops had received proper training and warned of the "far-reaching social, political and operational" risks of aiding law enforcement.

- Reuters

Get the RNZ app

for ad-free news and current affairs