海角直播

AI as a key economic driver for 海角直播

AI as a key economic driver for 海角直播

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The Kingdom of 海角直播 is at the crossover of an economic transformation driven by innovations and technology advancement in artificial intelligence. As the Kingdom continues to diversify or shift from its previous oil dependency, AI offers a significant opportunity to create jobs, bolster productivity, and enhance overall economic output and gross domestic product growth. By 2030, AI is estimated to contribute 12 percent to 海角直播鈥檚 GDP, highlighting the nation鈥檚 commitment to leveraging AI for sustainable economic development.

The Kingdom鈥檚 Vision 2030 framework focuses on reducing the nation鈥檚 reliance on oil through fostering technology-led industries with cutting-edge innovations. AI is vital and plays a significant role in this transition, especially by enhancing productivity in various sectors and facilitating the creation of a knowledge-based economy. A recent study by the ITU indicates that AI technologies are likely to contribute more than $13 trillion to the global economy by 2030, and 海角直播 has the potential to capture a giant share of this growth.

Recently, 海角直播鈥檚 investments in digital infrastructure have given the Kingdom a stronger foundation for AI adoption. For example, World Bank reports indicate that 海角直播鈥檚 digital economy projects, such as the National Strategy for Digital Transformation, are laying a solid foundation for the country to adopt cutting-edge technologies across its sectors.

The adoption of AI technologies presents a conducive environment to create jobs, especially in high-skilled sectors. AI鈥檚 cutting-edge technologies can foster the creation of new markets and services, which are critical in generating employment opportunities. A report by the IMF indicates that AI has great potential to create a positive effect on job creation, and this can be done through enhancing productivity and the automation of routine tasks.

Whereas AI technologies present many opportunities for countries to foster their economic growth, some challenges cannot be overlooked.

Hamad S. Alshehab, Hassan M. Alzain

Like never before, the adoption of AI in 海角直播 is likely to increase the demand for high-skilled workers in various fields. The country is focusing on training and education programs that aim at educating the workforce with the skills needed to ensure job creation and new opportunities. This is evident through the remarkable achievement of training more than 628,000 beginners in one year and offering specialized programs for about 7,625 experts in data and AI. The report by the World Economic Forum indicates that 75 percent of organizations across the world plan to adopt AI, and this is likely to create jobs, but also displacements. Despite the challenges that are likely to come with the adoption of AI, the Kingdom has the opportunity to mitigate them by reskilling its workforce for emerging roles in the modern world.

AI technologies are expected to enhance productivity in the country, through the automation of repetitive tasks, improving decision-making processes as well as optimizing supply chains. Research from the ITU says that AI is poised to boost global GDP by more than 16 percent by 2030. This is largely because of the implementation of automation and innovation. Thus, countries like 海角直播 are positioned to utilize AI in various sectors, including financial services, logistics and even manufacturing. For instance, the use of AI technologies in logistics has the potential to reduce costs, and at the same time, improve delivery time.

The government has been working proactively to create a conducive environment for new technologies such as AI. Programs such as the Saudi Data and AI Authority, and the National Strategy for AI, highlight the Kingdom鈥檚 commitment to take advantage of AI, and position itself to rank among the top 10 global leaders in data and AI by 2030. The country has created better grounds for international investments by fostering innovation, placing 海角直播 at the forefront of the global AI race, as evidenced by the $1.7 billion in total funds attracted by Saudi AI companies in 2023.

Whereas AI technologies present many opportunities for countries to foster their economic growth, some challenges cannot be overlooked. Thus, 海角直播 must address these challenges to utilize the full potential of AI. One of the critical challenges has been job displacement, especially in the low-skilled sectors. Although this might be the case, the IMF indicates that AI鈥檚 impact on job displacement is not entirely negative. For example, by implementing automation of routine tasks, AI allows the human workforce to focus on high-end activities, which can help countries increase productivity.

AI has already proved to be a major economic driver for countries like 海角直播. As the Kingdom continues its journey toward economic diversification, AI technologies play a critical role. By creating new job opportunities, enhancing productivity and fostering innovation, AI is poised to increase the Kingdom鈥檚 GDP growth soon. However, to be a global leader in this revolutionary AI era, 海角直播 must implement the right policies to allow better investments for a knowledge-based economy.

  • Hassan M. Alzain is pursuing a master鈥檚 degree in environmental management at Yale University. He led the Environmental Science, Sustainability and Policy Group at Aramco鈥檚 Environmental Protection, and is experienced in areas such as sustainability reporting, climate policy, environmental technology and data assurance.
  • Hamad S. Alshehab is pursuing a master鈥檚 degree in finance at London Business School. He led the Strategy, Finance & Governance at Aramco鈥檚 Innovation & Product Development Center (LAB7) and is experienced in areas including control systems, digital transformation, entrepreneurship and innovation.
Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not necessarily reflect Arab News' point of view

Trump turns $11.1 billion in US government funds into a 10 percent stake in downtrodden Intel

Trump turns $11.1 billion in US government funds into a 10 percent stake in downtrodden Intel
Updated 23 August 2025

Trump turns $11.1 billion in US government funds into a 10 percent stake in downtrodden Intel

Trump turns $11.1 billion in US government funds into a 10 percent stake in downtrodden Intel
  • US govt getting the stake through the conversion of $11.1 billion in previously issued funds and pledges, making a gain of聽$1.9 billion, on paper
  • Remarkable turn of events comes聽at a time that the chipmaker聽is in the process of laying off more than 20,000 workers in bid to bounce back from years of missteps

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump on Friday announced the US government has secured a 10 percent stake in struggling Silicon Valley pioneer Intel in a deal that was completed just a couple weeks after he was depicting the company鈥檚 CEO as a conflicted leader unfit for the job.
鈥淭he United States of America now fully owns and controls 10 percent of INTEL, a Great American Company that has an even more incredible future,鈥 Trump wrote in a post.
The US government is getting the stake through the conversion of $11.1 billion in previously issued funds and pledges. All told, the government is getting 433.3 million shares of non-voting stock priced at $20.47 apiece 鈥 a discount from Friday鈥檚 closing price at $24.80. That spread means the US government already has a gain of $1.9 billion, on paper.
The remarkable turn of events makes the US government one of Intel鈥檚 largest shareholders at a time that the Santa Clara, California, company is in the process of jettisoning more than 20,000 workers as part of its latest attempt to bounce back from years of missteps taken under a variety of CEOs.
Intel鈥檚 current CEO, Lip-Bu Tan, has only been on the job for slightly more than five months, and earlier this month, it looked like he might be on shaky ground already after some lawmakers raised national security concerns about his past investments in Chinese companies while he was a venture capitalist. Trump latched on to those concerns in an August 7 post demanding that Tan resign.
But Trump backed off after the Malaysian-born Tan professed his allegiance to the US in a public letter to Intel employees and went to the White House to meet with the president, leading to a deal that now has the US government betting that the company is on the comeback trail after losing more than $22 billion since the end of 2023. Trump hailed Tan as 鈥渉ighly respected鈥 CEO in his Friday post.
In a statement, Tan applauded Trump for 鈥渄riving historic investments in a vital industry鈥 and resolved to reward his faith in Intel. 鈥淲e are grateful for the confidence the President and the Administration have placed in Intel, and we look forward to working to advance US technology and manufacturing leadership,鈥 Tan said.
Intel鈥檚 current stock price is just slightly above where it was when Tan was hired in March and more than 60 percent below its peak of about $75 reached 25 years ago when its chips were still dominating the personal computer boom before being undercut by a shift to smartphones a few years later. The company鈥檚 market value currently stands at about $108 billion 鈥 a fraction of the current chip kingpin, Nvidia, which is valued at $4.3 trillion.
The stake is coming primarily through US government grants to Intel through the CHIPS and Science Act that was started under President Joe Biden鈥檚 administration as a way to foster more domestic manufacturing of computer chips to lessen the dependence on overseas factories.
But the Trump administration, which has regularly pilloried the policies of the Biden administration, saw the CHIPs act as a needless giveaway and is now hoping to make a profit off the funding that had been pledged to Intel.
鈥淲e think America should get the benefit of the bargain,鈥 US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said earlier this week. 鈥淚t鈥檚 obvious that it鈥檚 the right move to make.鈥
About $7.8 billion had been been pledged to Intel under the incentives program, but only $2.2 billion had been funded so far. Another $3.2 billion of the government investment is coming through the funds from another program called 鈥淪ecure Enclave.鈥
Although US government can鈥檛 vote with its shares and won鈥檛 have a seat on Intel鈥檚 board of directors, critics of the deal view it as a troubling cross-pollination between the public and private sectors that could hurt the tech industry in a variety of ways.
For instance, more tech companies may feel pressured to buy potentially inferior chips from Intel to curry favor with Trump at a time that he is already waging a trade war that threatens to affect their products in a potential scenario cited by Scott Lincicome, vice president of general economics for the Cato Institute.
鈥淥verall, it鈥檚 a horrendous move that will have real harms for US companies, US tech leadership, and the US economy overall,鈥 Lincicome posted Friday.
The 10 percent stake could also intensify the pressure already facing Tan, especially if Trump starts fixating on Intel鈥檚 stock price while resorting to his penchant for celebrating his past successes in business.
Nancy Tengler, CEO of money manager Laffer Tengler Investments, is among the investors who abandoned Intel years ago because of all the challenges facing Intel.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 see the benefit to the American taxpayer, nor do I see the benefit, necessarily to the chip industry,鈥 Tengler said while also raising worries about Trump meddling in Intel鈥檚 business.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 care how good of businessman you are, give it to the private sector and let people like me be the critic and let the government get to the business of government.,鈥 Tengler said.
Although rare, it鈥檚 not unprecedented for the US government to become a significant shareholder in a prominent company. One of the most notable instances occurred during the Great Recession in 2008 when the government injected nearly $50 billion into General Motors in return for a roughly 60 percent stake in the automaker at a time it was on the verge of bankruptcy. The government ended up with a roughly $10 billion loss after it sold its stock in GM.
The US government鈥檚 stake in Intel coincides with Trump鈥檚 push to bring production to the US, which has been a focal point of the trade war that he has been waging throughout the world. By lessening the country鈥檚 dependence on chips manufactured overseas, the president believes the US will be better positioned to maintain its technological lead on China in the race to create artificial intelligence.
Even before gaining the 10 percent stake in Intel, Trump had been leveraging his power to reprogram the operations of major computer chip companies. The administration is requiring Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices, two companies whose chips are powering the AI craze, to pay a 15 percent commission on their sales of chips in China in exchange for export licenses.
 


Thousands demand union rights and civic freedoms in large Tunisia protest

Thousands demand union rights and civic freedoms in large Tunisia protest
Updated 23 August 2025

Thousands demand union rights and civic freedoms in large Tunisia protest

Thousands demand union rights and civic freedoms in large Tunisia protest
  • UGTT Secretary-General Noureddine Taboubi decried what he called 鈥渢hreats and smear campaigns鈥 against the union and called on authorities to release political prisoners and provide fair trials

TUNIS: Thousands of members and supporters of Tunisia鈥檚 powerful Tunisian General Labour Union (UGTT) protested in the capital on Thursday over what they called a decline in union rights and civic freedoms.
It was one of the largest political demonstrations Tunisia has seen recently, and comes amid a deepening standoff between the UGTT and President Kais Saied.
Last month, a UGTT strike over wages and working conditions disrupted transport services across the country and piled pressure on Saied to deal with a deepening economic crisis. In response, hundreds of Saied鈥檚 supporters staged a rally outside the UGTT headquarters early this month to urge the president to suspend the union.
Thursday鈥檚 protest started in front of the UGTT headquarters in Tunis and passed through Habib Bourguiba Avenue, the site of mass protests that led to the downfall of President Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali in 2011 and sparked the Arab Spring uprisings across the Middle East.
Demonstrators chanted slogans including, 鈥淭he right to struggle is a duty鈥 and decried increasing poverty and hunger and called for the protection of workers鈥 rights.
UGTT Secretary-General Noureddine Taboubi decried what he called 鈥渢hreats and smear campaigns鈥 against the union and called on authorities to release political prisoners and provide fair trials.
鈥淭he union will not deviate from the path of struggle and will adhere to its social and national role to guarantee workers鈥 rights,鈥 he said in a speech.
There was no immediate comment from authorities on the protest.
Saied assumed sweeping powers in 2021, shut down the elected parliament, started ruling by decree, suspended the Supreme Judicial Council and sacked dozens of judges in a move the opposition described as a coup. 

 


Gambian man sentenced to more than 67 years after US conviction for torture

Gambian man sentenced to more than 67 years after US conviction for torture
Updated 23 August 2025

Gambian man sentenced to more than 67 years after US conviction for torture

Gambian man sentenced to more than 67 years after US conviction for torture
  • Michael Sang Correa, a member of former Gambian dictator Jammeh鈥檚 death squad, was convicted by US jury in April
  • Rights groups say Jammeh carried out brutalities against critics and political dissenters

A Gambian man who was part of an armed unit run by former dictator Yahya Jammeh and was convicted of torture by a US jury in April has been sentenced to more than 67 years in prison, the US Justice Department said on Friday.
A Colorado jury convicted the Gambian national, Michael Sang Correa, for his participation in the torture of numerous victims in Gambia in 2006, including beating and flesh burning, because of the victims鈥 purported involvement in a coup plot against the then-president, the Justice Department said.
Correa, 46, was sentenced to 810 months in prison by Senior Judge Christine Arguello for the District of Colorado after conviction on one count of conspiracy to commit torture and five counts of torture, the department said in a statement.
The case marked the first criminal prosecution over involvement in the feared armed group known as 鈥渢he Junglers,鈥 which operated in Gambia鈥檚 police state during Jammeh鈥檚 rule. The former president seized power in 1994 and foiled several attempts to overthrow him before he lost a 2016 election.
Correa was arrested in 2020 under a law which makes it a crime for anyone in the US to commit torture abroad.
Jammeh denied torture during his rule.
The Junglers were a secretive offshoot of the Gambian army that took orders from Jammeh. Rights groups and former victims say they carried out brutalities that worsened after a failed coup in 2006.
Suspected coup plotters and other outspoken opponents of Jammeh were taken to the National Intelligence Agency near one of the capital Banjul鈥檚 white sand beaches, according to victims.
Some found themselves in a torture chamber where they were subjected to electric shocks, beatings and burning with acid, they said. (Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by Edmund Klamann)


Being Muslim and American in the nation鈥檚 heartland

Being Muslim and American in the nation鈥檚 heartland
Updated 23 August 2025

Being Muslim and American in the nation鈥檚 heartland

Being Muslim and American in the nation鈥檚 heartland
  • The Muslim presence across the Midwest grew exponentially after a 1965 immigration law eliminated the quotas that had blocked arrivals from many parts of the world since the mid-1920s, Curtis said
  • Faroz Waziri jokes that he and his wife Mena might have been the first Afghans in town when they came in the mid-2010s on a special visa for those who had worked for the US armed forces overseas
  • 鈥淵ou can be a Muslim that鈥檚 practicing your religion and still coexist with everybody else around you,鈥 said Hassan Igram, who chairs the center鈥檚 board of trustees

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa: The oldest surviving place of worship for Muslims in the United States is a white clapboard building on a grassy corner plot, as unassumingly Midwestern as its neighboring houses in Cedar Rapids 鈥 except for a dome.
The descendants of the Lebanese immigrants who constructed 鈥渢he Mother Mosque鈥 almost a century ago 鈥 along with newcomers from Afghanistan, East Africa and beyond 鈥 are defining what it can mean to be both Muslim and American in the nation鈥檚 heartland just as heightened conflicts in the Middle East fuel tensions over immigration and Islam in the United States.

Imam Taha Tawil of "The Mother Mosque of America" discusses the building's long history in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, on Friday, Aug. 8, 2025. (AP)

Standing by the door in a gold-embroidered black robe, Fatima Igram Smejkal greeted the faithful with a cheerful 鈥渟alaam鈥 as they hurried into the Islamic Center of Cedar Rapids for Friday prayers. In 1934, her family helped open what the National Register of Historic Places calls 鈥渢he first building designed and constructed specifically as a house of worship for Muslims in the United States.鈥
鈥淭hey all came from nothing 鈥 so they wanted to give back,鈥 Smejkal said of families like hers, who arrived at the turn of the 20th century. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why I鈥檓 so kind to the ones that come in from Somalia and the Congo and Sudan and Afghanistan. I have no idea what they left, what they鈥檙e thinking when they walk in that mosque.鈥

Muslims attend Friday prayer at the Islamic Center of Cedar Rapids on Friday, Aug. 8, 2025, in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. (AP)

The community now gathers in the Islamic Center. It was built in the 1970s when they became too many for the Mother Mosque鈥檚 living-room-sized prayer hall, and now they鈥檙e have outgrown its prayer hall, as well. Hundreds of fifth-generation Muslim Iowans, recent refugees and migrants pray on industrial carpets rolled onto the gym鈥檚 basketball court 鈥 the elderly on walkers, babies in car seats, women in headscarves and men sporting headgear from African kufi and Afghan pakol caps to baseball hats.
This physical space where diverse groups gather helps sustain community as immigrants try to preserve their heritage while assimilating into US culture and society.

Community members talk after Friday prayer at the Islamic Center of Cedar Rapids on Friday, Aug. 8, 2025, in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. (AP)

鈥淵ou can be a Muslim that鈥檚 practicing your religion and still coexist with everybody else around you,鈥 said Hassan Igram, who chairs the center鈥檚 board of trustees. He shares the same first and last names as his grandfather and Smejkal鈥檚 grandfather 鈥 two cousins who came to Iowa as boys in the 1910s.
Lebanese migrants 鈥楳other Mosque鈥
Tens of thousands of young men, both Christians and Muslims, settled in booming Midwestern towns after fleeing the Ottoman Empire, many with little more than a Bible or a Qur鈥檃n in their bags. They often worked selling housewares off their backs to widely scattered farms, earning enough to buy horses and buggies, and then opened grocery stores.

Two young girls stand together outside of the Islamic Center of Cedar Rapids after Friday prayer on Aug. 8, 2025, in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. (AP)

Through bake sales and community dinners, a group of Muslim women raised money in the 1920s to build what was called the 鈥淢uslim Temple.鈥 Like the Igrams, Anace Aossey remembers attending prayer there with his parents 鈥 though as children they were more focused on the Dixie Cream donuts that would follow.
鈥淲e weren鈥檛 raised real strict religiously,鈥 said Aossey, whose father sold goods along the tracks from a 175-pound sack. 鈥淭hey were here to integrate themselves into the American society.鈥
Growing up Muslim in America
Muslims sometimes faced institutional discrimination. After serving in World War II, Smejkal鈥檚 father, Abdallah Igram, successfully campaigned for soldiers鈥 dog tags to include Muslim as an option, along with Catholic, Protestant and Jewish.

Mohamed Mahmoud, right, helps Afghan refugee Faroz Waziri, left, and his son select deserts at the halal grocery store he opened in 2022 after immigrating from Sudan on Friday, Aug. 8, 2025, in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. (AP)

But in Cedar Rapids, immigrants found mutual acceptance, fostered through houses of worship and friendships between US-born children and their non-Muslim neighbors. Smejkal鈥檚 best friend was Catholic, and her father kept beef hot dogs in the kitchen to respect the Muslim prohibition against pork. Smejkal鈥檚 father, in turn, made sure Friday meals included fish sticks.
鈥淎rab-speaking Muslims were part and parcel of the same stories that inform our sense of what the Midwest is and its values are,鈥 said Indiana University professor Edward E. Curtis, IV. 鈥淭hey participated in the making of the American heartland.鈥
Abdallah Igram is buried in the city鈥檚 hilltop Muslim cemetery, among the first in the United States when it was built in the 1940s. It鈥檚 next to the Czech cemetery 鈥 for the descendants of the migrants who helped establish Cedar Rapids in the 1850s 鈥 and the Jewish cemetery, whose operators donated trees to the Muslim one after damage from a derecho five years ago. Smejkal wishes the whole world鈥檚 faiths could collaborate this way.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 when there鈥檚 no barriers anymore. I pray one day it鈥檚 really like that,鈥 Smejkal said.
Being Muslim in the Heartland
The Muslim presence across the Midwest grew exponentially after a 1965 immigration law eliminated the quotas that had blocked arrivals from many parts of the world since the mid-1920s, Curtis said.
Mistrust flared again after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, especially in farming communities whose young people were fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq, said Ako Abdul-Samad, an African-American who represented Des Moines for nearly two decades in the Iowa House of Representatives. He feared being Muslim would prevent his election when he first ran for office, but voters re-elected him again and again.
Immigration, including from Muslim countries, remains a contentious issue, even as Muslim communities flourish and increase their political influence in major cities like Minneapolis and Detroit.
But daily interactions between Muslims and their neighbors have provided some protection from prejudice, according to the Mother Mosque imam, a Palestinian who immigrated in the 1980s. 鈥淪tereotypes and things did not work鈥 in Cedar Rapids, Taha Tawil said.
Bosnian Muslims say they鈥檝e had similar experiences near Des Moines, where a new multimillion dollar mosque and cultural center is opening next month, an expansion of the first center established by war refugees 20 years ago.
鈥淥ur neighbors have been great to us, including the farmers we got the land from,鈥 said its treasurer, Moren Blazevic. 鈥淲e鈥檙e finally Iowans.鈥
Becoming Midwesterners
Faroz Waziri jokes that he and his wife Mena might have been the first Afghans in town when they came in the mid-2010s on a special visa for those who had worked for the US armed forces overseas. After struggling with 鈥渃ulture shock鈥 and language barriers, they鈥檝e become naturalized US citizens, and he鈥檚 the refugee resources manager at a non-profit founded by Catholic nuns.
While grateful for the aid and the safety they feel, the Waziris miss their families and homeland. And they fear that cultural differences 鈥 especially the individualism Americans express, like when they sit around a table for meals, instead of together on a rug 鈥 remain too vast.
鈥淢entally and emotionally, I never think I鈥檓 American,鈥 said Mena Waziri. She鈥檚 a college graduate now, and loves the independence and women鈥檚 rights that remain unattainable in Taliban-run Afghanistan. But the family is keen for their US-born son, Rayan, to have Muslim friends and values.
These tensions are familiar for the descendants of the city鈥檚 first Muslim settlers, like Aossey, who keeps exhibit panels about Lebanese immigration and integration in the same garage where he stores ATVs on his recreational farm.
鈥淢y story is the American story,鈥 Aossey said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not the Islamic story.鈥

 


Trump threatens federal intervention in Chicago, government takeover in D.C.

Trump threatens federal intervention in Chicago, government takeover in D.C.
Updated 23 August 2025

Trump threatens federal intervention in Chicago, government takeover in D.C.

Trump threatens federal intervention in Chicago, government takeover in D.C.
  • Chicago, other cities do not share D.C.鈥檚 federal status
  • Violent crime has fallen in Washington, Chicago, data shows

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said on Friday he would probably expand his crime crackdown to Chicago, intervening in another city governed by Democrats, and threatened to take full control of Washington, D.C., rather than only its policing.
Saying without evidence that violent crime was out of control in the nation鈥檚 capital, Trump deployed D.C. National Guard soldiers and federal agents on the streets last week with a mandate to reduce crime.
鈥淚t was horrible and Mayor Bowser better get her act straight or she won鈥檛 be mayor very long, because we鈥檒l take it over with the federal government, run it like it鈥檚 supposed to be run,鈥 Trump told reporters, referring to Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser.
Recent statistics, which Trump dismissed, show crime has declined in the US capital since a 2023 peak.
Washington is a unique federal enclave, established in the US Constitution and falling under the jurisdiction of Congress, not belonging to any state.
In 1973, Congress passed the District of Columbia Home Rule Act, allowing residents to elect a mayor and council members.
Continuing his off-the-cuff remarks at the White House, Trump mused about extending his efforts to other cities. He has declined to explain how the federal government could intervene in local law enforcement in cities outside of the federal enclave of D.C.
鈥淐hicago is a mess,鈥 Trump said, deriding its mayor. 鈥淎nd we鈥檒l straighten that one out probably next.鈥
Trump said some of his supporters in Chicago have been 鈥渟creaming for us to come.鈥
鈥淚 did great with the Black vote, as you know, and they want something to happen,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o I think Chicago will be our next, and then we鈥檒l help with New York.鈥
As in Washington, crime, including murders, has declined in Chicago in the last year.
Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson said he took Trump鈥檚 comments seriously but has not received formal communication from the administration about federal law enforcement or military deployments.
The mayor said Trump鈥檚 approach has been 鈥渦ncoordinated, uncalled for and unsound.鈥 He added: 鈥淭here are many things the federal government could do to help us reduce crime and violence in Chicago, but sending in the military is not one of them.鈥
New York City, also criticized by Trump, has reported a steady decline in violent crime in recent decades, and now has a relatively low murder rate among big American cities. Trump also threatened federal government intervention in San Francisco, another city governed by Democrats.
While the Republican president has cast his efforts as an urgent move to help residents feel safe again, Democrats and other critics say he aims to expand the powers of the president beyond the bounds of the Constitution and assert federal control over cities run by Democratic officials.
The US Constitution鈥檚 Tenth Amendment generally prevents the federal government from commandeering state or municipal officials and from intervening in states鈥 legal and criminal justice systems unless citizens鈥 constitutional rights are being violated.