President Donald Trump signed an executive order on March 27 to create a task force to help crack down on crime in Washington, D.C., in addition to ensuring that “quality-of-life laws” in the nation’s capital are enforced.
The D.C. Safe and Beautiful Task Force will consist of representatives from agencies including the Department of the Interior, the Department of Homeland Security, the FBI, and the Department of Transportation. It will be able to request assistance from local law enforcement in tasks such as monitoring the city’s sanctuary-city policy.
The executive order will ensure a federal role in maintaining order and safety in the District of Columbia.
“America’s capital must be a place in which residents, commuters, and tourists feel safe at all hours, including on public transit. Its highways, boulevards, and parks should be clean, well-kept, and pleasant,” the executive order stated.
“Its monuments, museums, and buildings should reflect and inspire awe and appreciation for our nation’s strength, greatness, and heritage,” it continued. “Our citizens deserve nothing less.”
In August, Trump pledged to combat crime and homelessness in Washington if elected.
“We will take over the horribly run capital of our nation in Washington, D.C., and clean it up, renovate it, rebuild our capital city, so there’s no longer a nightmare of murder and crime,” he said at a campaign rally in Georgia.
“We’re going to stop the murder and crime. You go down from your state, you end up getting mugged and murdered in our capital. It'll be run tough and strong by our great police officers,” Trump added. “We will become the most beautiful capital, anywhere in the world.”
Cumulative violent crime, which includes robberies and sexual assaults, is down 27 percent since last year, with all crime dropping 9 percent.
Earlier this month, Trump called for the city to clear out homeless encampments.
Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser criticized the bill.
“Home Rule is a limited self-government, but what we should be focused on is our pathway to becoming the 51st state,” she said on Feb. 10.
On Dec. 30, Bowser met with Trump at the president’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida. She said it was a “great meeting.”