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US President Donald Trump initially planned to deploy federal forces to San Francisco, criticizing it as an emblem of flawed liberal policies. However, after discussions with top tech industry leaders and the city’s mayor, he reconsidered his stance.
“I received an enlightening call from some extraordinary individuals, including friends of mine who are highly successful,” Trump shared with reporters at the White House on Thursday. He specifically mentioned Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, a leading global tech company, and Marc Benioff, CEO of Salesforce, a major software firm.
According to Trump, these leaders assured him that San Francisco was actively tackling its crime issues. “Therefore, we are pausing the federal intervention for now, allowing them the opportunity to resolve the situation,” Trump explained.
He added that he remains open to revisiting the decision if the situation does not improve.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem commented on the development.
Trump said the increased federal force had been planned for Saturday.
He didn’t specify whether he was just referring to National Guard troops, which he had threatened to send in, or if he would also halt a potential ramp up of immigration enforcement.
US Customs and Border Protection agents arrived at a US Coast Guard base near the city on Thursday morning, drawing protesters.
US Immigration and Customs Enforcement informed Alameda County Sheriff Yesenia Sanchez that the operation had been called off for the entire Bay Area, a nine-county region of about 8 million people, Sgt. Roberto Morales, a spokesman for the sheriff, said Friday.
A careful approach to Trump
Outreach from billionaire CEOs clearly had a hand in the rare reprieve Trump handed a Democrat-led city.
But Trump also credited Mayor Daniel Lurie, who has worked to avoid direct confrontation with the Republican president since both took office in January.
Lurie has governed as an earnest and relentless cheerleader of San Francisco, and repeatedly refused to weigh in on national politics or to mention Trump’s name.
Instead, he’s focused on local issues — public safety, luring back business and reversing the city’s pandemic-fueled decline.
When Trump said repeatedly earlier this week that he’d send the National Guard into San Francisco to quell crime, Lurie noted overall crime is down 26 per cent compared to last year and car break-ins are at a 22-year low.
“I told the mayor, I love what you’re doing, I respect it, and I respect the people that are doing it,” Trump said, referencing a phone call the two had Wednesday.
An heir to the Levi Strauss fortune and anti-poverty philanthropist, Lurie is a centrist Democrat who had never held office until he ousted then-Mayor London Breed in last November’s election.
He has stated no other political aspirations than to improve the city and has said that he will work with anyone who wants to do the same.
Lurie said he told Trump that he welcomes the city’s “continued partnership” with the Drug Enforcement Agency and other federal authorities to get illegal narcotics off the streets and contribute to San Francisco’s falling crime rates. Fentanyl has been a major scourge on the city’s streets.
“But having the military and militarized immigration enforcement in our city will hinder our recovery,” Lurie said.
Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem said Friday that her department won’t tolerate violence like the truck that rammed into a Coast Guard station in the San Francisco Bay Area on Thursday night.
She said during a news conference in Minneapolis that she had discussed the incident with Trump and suggested the president could change his mind about holding off a federal enforcement surge if more violence occurs.
If they “don’t figure out how to protect our law enforcement officers and protect our Coast Guard members, that we would be forced to come in and protect those individuals,” she said.
City reacts with praise and skepticism
Former US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a San Francisco Democrat, praised Lurie on social media, saying that he “has demonstrated exceptional leadership.” Steve Kerr, Golden State Warriors head coach, called him an “absolute superstar” responsible for the good things happening in San Francisco.
The office of California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a former San Francisco mayor, said on X that, “Trump, has finally, for once, listened to reason.”
Newsom, for his part, has repeatedly sparred with Trump, particularly after Trump deployed the California National Guard to Los Angeles against Newsom’s wishes.
But others are skeptical that Trump will keep his word. Indeed, Trump said he was giving Lurie “a chance” to turn things around and said the federal government could “take criminals out” much faster.
“We cannot trust Trump,” said San Francisco Supervisor Connie Chan, a progressive who runs politically left of Lurie but has a good working relationship with the mayor.
San Francisco Supervisor Jackie Fielder, who is also more politically liberal than Lurie, said in a statement that she disagrees with Lurie’s desire to coordinate more with federal law enforcement, saying that “is a dangerous invitation to a fascist administration.”
Trump said he received “four or five calls” from business leaders urging him not to send federal force and to let city leaders continue to work on reducing crime.
“They’re the biggest people in the world, a lot of the high tech,” he said at the White House. “They want to do it. And I said, ‘I am so honored to let you do it. And if it doesn’t work out, we’ll do it for you very quickly.’”
Benioff of Salesforce, who also owns Time magazine, told the New York Times earlier this month that he’d welcome Guard troops to help quell crime ahead of his major annual business conference.
He quickly face backlash and then apologized, saying the troops weren’t needed. He confirmed to The Associated Press that he spoke to Trump but did not provide more details. Nvidia declined to comment.
In announcing his decision to back off a surge, Trump did not mention other cities in the Bay Area, including Oakland, where he has also threatened to send in federal troops.
Some other Democrats who have also taken a less combative approach to Trump have avoided his focus as he deploys Guard troops around the country.
He has not, for example, focused on Detroit despite criticism of the city. Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer has tried to engage with Trump including with White House visits.










