Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Governor pulls most troops from border

- KATHLEEN RONAYNE

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday he’s withdrawin­g most of the state’s National Guard troops on the Mexico border because he won’t participat­e in the Trump administra­tion’s “absurd theatrics” on border security.

Still, he acknowledg­ed some troops were doing good work fighting drug crime and said he plans to allow 100 of the roughly 360 state troops now deployed to keep working with the federal government.

“I’m trying to acknowledg­e there are some legitimate concerns but I’m not going to play into the hype and the politics,” he told reporters before signing an executive order changing the troops’ mission.

Former Gov. Jerry Brown agreed in April to deploy up to 400 troops to the border in response to a request from the Trump administra­tion made to four border states. Brown made it clear then that California troops couldn’t aid in immigratio­n enforcemen­t, but Newsom said there’s been a “gray area” in their duties.

Maj. Gen. David Baldwin of the California National Guard said the troops have not participat­ed in immigratio­n detention but some are conducting camera surveillan­ce that could inadverten­tly aid in immigratio­n enforcemen­t. Newsom’s rebuke of the Trump administra­tion came on the eve of Newsom’s first state of the state address as governor of the nation’s most populous state.

“This whole thing is the theater of the absurd and California has had enough,” Newsom said.

The Trump administra­tion hasn’t commented. President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence held a meeting Monday on border security with sheriffs from across the country. Sheriff Donny Youngblood of California’s Kern County was in attendance, according to the White House.

The drawdown of California’s troops will begin immediatel­y but may not be completed until March 31, when the state’s current agreement with the federal government is set to end.

Newsom has reassigned roughly 110 of the troops to beef up California’s fire preparatio­n efforts ahead of the next wildfire season and to expand the guard’s counterdru­g task force program. The expansion requires approval from the U.S. Department of Defense.

Newsom made clear during his campaign that he did not support the use of California Guard troops at the border. He took action about a month into his governorsh­ip because he wanted to responsibl­y review the issue, he said.

He initially wanted to pull all of California’s troops back but said he was convinced by Guard officials that good work is being done related to combating drug traffickin­g.

If the Trump administra­tion does not agree to Newsom’s new terms, “we’ll bring the rest back,” he said.

Newsom’s move came on the heels of a decision by New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, also a Democrat, to pull back her state’s troops from the border.

Newsom’s Monday order said the increase in Central American migrants crossing the border is the result of a desire to escape violence and repression fueled in part by the activities of transnatio­nal crime organizati­ons. The California Guard’s resources are best spent tackling those activities, he argued.

Texas and Arizona still have troops on the border.

The 360 troops are a fraction of the roughly 14,000 that have been deployed throughout California for various operations since 2016, according to Newsom’s office.

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