The results are in, and President Donald Trump’s crime crackdown in Washington, D.C. has been a resounding success – and it’s putting Democrats on the defensive nationwide.
As White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt announced on Thursday, total crime in the nation’s capital is down 19 percent since Trump federalized the D.C. Police Department and deployed National Guard troops to the streets. Violent crime is down 30 percent, carjackings are down 67 percent, homicides are down 57 percent, and robberies are down 40 percent.
Even Democrat D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser has admitted how successful Trump’s anti-crime push has been. After initially calling the President’s actions “unsettling and unprecedented,” Bowser declared at a press conference this week, “We greatly appreciate the surge of officers that enhance what MPD has been able to do in this city.”
That’s about as close as a Democrat in a deep blue city like D.C. will ever come to complimenting Donald Trump, and it speaks volumes about how, try as they might, liberals just can’t ignore that the President’s efforts are working.
Even more importantly from a political perspective, the rapid cleanup of D.C. has Democrats elsewhere in the country on their heels. California Governor Gavin Newsom – while attempting to claim the mantle as the left’s leading anti-Trump figure – is now deploying state police to major cities. Though the 2028 hopeful insists he’s “not reacting and responding to anything,” it’s obvious that Newsom is feeling the pressure after seeing the wild success of Trump’s efforts in D.C.
The real danger for Democrats, particularly looking ahead to the midterm elections next year, is that the American public now has proof of concept for what Republicans have been saying for years: that the crime, chaos, and general dysfunction in virtually every U.S. city is a choice.
It’s one thing for conservatives to tell people how easy it would be to make cities safe again if they would just vote out the soft-on-crime liberal leaders who run them. But now they can see with their own eyes that Republicans were right all along. As the old cliché goes, “actions speak louder than words.”
Republicans have a golden opportunity to take this message national with D.C. as a test case for what all of America’s long-suffering cities could look like with more Republicans in power.
While urban cores likely won’t be turning red anytime soon, the all-important swing voters who live in America’s suburbs want safe cities too. Moms and dads want to be able to take their kids to sporting events and concerts downtown. They want their college students to be able to enjoy nightlife without having to worry about being robbed, raped, or murdered. And they don’t want to feel like there is a hotbed for crime just a few miles away from their homes.
Polling shows this is a winning issue for the GOP. Eight in ten Americans say big-city crime is a major problem, and a majority now approves of President Donald Trump’s handling of it, according to a new AP-NORC survey. The concern spans parties: 96 percent of Republicans and 68 percent of Democrats say crime in large cities is an issue.
People who commute to cities for work, entertainment, and daily errands are shaping this debate. They want results, not a woke theory on the racist origins of crime. These voters demand the basics: safe commutes, clean transit, and downtowns where families can walk after dark. They are done being told that disorder is normal.
Republicans’ pitch to suburban voters (and those independent-minded urban voters who are willing to hear them out) is simple: make city streets livable again. Clean trains, safe parks, consequences for repeat offenders. Do that, and the suburbs vote for you. Just like Trump did the job that D.C.’s Democrat leaders have failed to do for 50 years, Republicans can argue that more tough-on-crime conservatives in Congress and especially state legislatures can bring about similar results in other cities throughout the country.
Democrats have handed the GOP plenty of ammo to make this case. One recent example is a widely shared clip of Rep. Jamie Raskin, who says dismissively that crime has “always been part of our history.” That line sounds like resignation when communities are asking for accountability and deterrence, not another lecture on what they should tolerate.
New York City’s mayoral race is another window into Democrats’ vulnerability on this front. Zohran Mamdani, who has previously described the NYPD as “racist” and “anti-queer,” is now under fire over reporting that he backs ending prosecution of all misdemeanor offenses. (Mamdani’s campaign later denied that accusation.)
Mamdani may well win the mayorship, but his victory could produce a backlash in several swing House districts surrounding the Big Apple.
For decades, Democrats have waved away urban crime concerns by blaming racism, “structural inequalities,” or the very police officers who risk their lives to keep the streets safe. The implication has always been that city leaders are powerless to do anything about rampant theft, carjackings, homeless encampments, or any of the other crises that make America’s cities look like third-world slums.
But that narrative is now collapsing in the face of Trump’s success in D.C. Republicans now can credibly promise similar results elsewhere when local leadership fails. That is the yardstick families will use.
Republicans shouldn’t overcomplicate the message. Back the police. Enforce the law. Put victims first. If Washington continues to look calmer and cleaner in the coming weeks, expect suburban voters to ask for the same in the cities near where they live, and to back the party willing to deliver it.
Sarah Katherine Sisk is a proud Hillsdale College alumna and a master’s student in economics at George Mason University. You can follow her on X @SKSisk76.
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