Thursday, November 6, 2025

California asks court to block use of military to enforce law; Trump says army parade protests would trigger ‘very heavy force’ – live

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Trump says anyone who protests at Saturday’s military parade ‘will be met with very heavy force’

Donald Trump warned people against protesting at this weekend’s military parade in Washington to celebrate the US Army’s 250th anniversary.

“For those people that want to protest, they’re going to be met with very big force,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. “I haven’t even heard about a protest, but you know, this is people that hate our country, but they will be met with very heavy force.”

Law enforcement agencies are preparing for hundreds of thousands of people to attend Saturday’s parade, Secret Service special agent in charge Matt McCool (his real name) said yesterday, according to Reuters.

McCool said thousands of agents, officers and specialists will be deployed from law enforcement agencies from across the country.
The FBI and the Metropolitan police department have said there are no credible threats to the event.

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Key events

Trump narrates the story of the US army’s role in War of 1812, leaving out previous claim that ‘airports’ were seized

After repeating a series of deeply partisan claims about his 2024 election victory, Donald Trump turned to the announced subject of the speech, the founding of the US army 250 years ago.

Trump then went on to narrate highlights of the US army’s history, including its role in defeating the British in the war of 1812.

Trump told the tale of Francis Scott Key, whose poem about a battle in that war was later transformed into the current US national anthem, The Star-Spangled Banner. Trump then greeted Major Kyle Key, a descendant of the poet. Trump also praised the major’s looks, suggesting tha it was the result of “great genetics”.

The last time Trump attempted to discuss this history, at a Fourth of July speech in Washington in 2019, he memorably struggled to read the rain-streaked teleprompter, and made the improbably claims that the Continental Army was “named after” George Washington in 1775, and that, during the War of 1812, “Our army manned the amperth, ranned the ramparts, it took over the airports, it did everything it had to do”.

Donald Trump’s history of the US army during a 2019 speech included some “alternative facts”.
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