President Trump said Friday he plans to deploy the National Guard to Memphis, Tenn., to fight crime.
“We’re going to Memphis,” Trump said on “Fox & Friends.” “Memphis is deeply troubled.”
The president said that in addition to National Guard troops, he’d send in “anybody else we need,” including the U.S. military “if we need it.”
Trump suggested that both Republican Gov. Bill Lee (Tenn.) and the Democratic Mayor of Memphis, Paul Young, are on board with the deployment.
“The mayor is happy. He’s a Democrat mayor. The mayor is happy,” Trump said. “And the governor [of] Tennessee, the governor is happy.”
Young said earlier this week that he’d been informed of the decision.
“I am committed to working to ensure any efforts strengthen our community and build on our progress,” Young told WMCA in Memphis.
Lee issued a statement Friday confirming “a comprehensive mission with the Tennessee National Guard, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Tennessee Highway Patrol, Memphis Police Department, and other law enforcement agencies.”
Memphis has the highest crime rate in the country, based on FBI data from 2024.
• The Trump administration asked a federal appeals court to allow the president to fire Federal Reserve board of governors member Lisa Cook ahead of a key two-day meeting next week to set interest rates.
It’s the latest effort by Trump to remove Cook after a federal judge intervened to stop her firing. The Trump administration has accused Cook of mortgage fraud, although no charges have been brought against her.
The Federal Reserve says it will abide by whatever decision the courts render.
Economists expect the central bank will cut rates at next week’s meeting, although the combination of inflation and worrisome jobs numbers has muddied the picture and provoked fears of stagflation.
Stephen Miran, the chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers who Trump tapped to fill a different open board seat, is expected to be confirmed by the Senate on Monday in time to cast a vote at the board meeting.
• The United Nations Security Council held an emergency meeting Friday after Poland shot down Russian drones that entered its airspace.
NATO saw the incursion into Polish airspace as a direct provocation and invoked Article 4.
After initially appearing angered at Russian President Vladimir Putin, Trump on Thursday brushed it off, saying the Russian drones in Polish airspace “could have been a mistake.”
Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk rejected that suggestion.
“We would also wish that the drone attack on Poland was a mistake,” he said. “But it wasn’t. And we know it.”
• Secretary of State Marco Rubio will head to Israel on Saturday for discussions on the Gaza Strip in the wake of an Israeli strike on Qatar.
In addition, Trump will meet with Qatar’s Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani in New York on Friday, Axios reports.
Qatar is furious at Israel for launching a strike in Doha against Hamas political leaders.
In an interview with The Hill’s Laura Kelly, Qatari Foreign Ministry spokesperson Majed al-Ansari called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu an “unhinged, narcissistic leader.”
The strike provoked a rare rebuke of Israel from the Trump White House.
The U.S. joined the other 14 members of the United Nations Security Council on Thursday in condemning Israel’s attack.
Netanyahu has said he’ll strike Qatar again if Hamas political leaders aren’t expelled.