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Trump challenges anyone to stop him

Los Angeles Times

|

January 08, 2026

Congress is stymied as the president acts with apparent impunity at home and abroad.

- BY MICHAEL WILNER

Five years after the Jan. 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol by President Trump’s supporters, the White House released a website this week attempting to revise history.

Reasserting Trump’s false claim that he had won the 2020 presidential election, the administration doubled down on his decision to issue blanket pardons for the rioters, blamed Capitol Police for escalating tensions that day, and denounced Trump's vice president at the time, Mike Pence, for “refusing to act” in defiance of the Constitution to stop congressional certification of Trump's loss.

It was a display of political audacity that has become the hallmark of Trump's second act — challenging anyone to stop him from asserting raw executive authority, both at home and increasingly abroad.

Whether on foreign or domestic policy, lawmakers have struggled to respond to an administration that moves with unfettered restraint and exceptional speed. The U.S. Supreme around him.

But Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey blasted that characterization as “garbage” and criticized the federal deployment of more than 2,000 officers to the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul as part of the immigration crackdown.

"What they are doing is not to provide safety in America. What they are doing is causing chaos and distrust," Frey said, calling on the immigration agents to leave. "They're ripping families apart. They're sowing chaos on our streets, and in this case, quite literally killing people.

"They are already trying to spin this as an action of self-defense. Having seen the video myself, I wanna tell everybody directly, that is bullshit," the mayor said.

Frey said he had a message for ICE: “Get the f-out of Minneapolis.”

A shooting caught on video

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