By lwilliams@semourbanvoices.com - August 27, 2025
When Donald Trump dispatched National Guard troops into Washington, D.C. branding it a “crime-ridden wasteland” and sending in 800 National Guard troops, it wasn’t just the nation’s capital under scrutiny. Trump’s remarks and threats of similar actions in other cities—naming Baltimore, Chicago, Los Angeles, and Oakland—carry a striking pattern: every one of those cities is led by a Black mayor.
“It gives us an opportunity to say we need to amplify our voices to confront the rhetoric that crime is just running rampant around major U.S. cities. It’s just not true,” said Savannah Mayor Van Johnson, president of the African American Mayors Association. “It’s not supported by any evidence or statistics whatsoever.”
To many across the Midwest and South, including right here in Southeast Missouri and Southern Illinois, the message was clear: the federal government is targeting Black-led cities with a narrative of failure, despite clear evidence that violent crime is actually dropping.
“It gives us an opportunity to say we need to amplify our voices to confront the rhetoric that crime is just running rampant around major U.S. cities. It’s just not true,” said Savannah, Georgia, Mayor Van Johnson, president of the African American Mayors Association.
The statistics tell a different story Crime Is Falling, Not Rising
Contrary to Trump’s claims, violent crime is falling across several major cities.
Mayors credit youth engagement programs, gun buybacks, community partnerships, and treating violence as a public health crisis — not just a law enforcement problem.
“These results show that we’re on the right track,” Oakland Mayor Barbara Lee said. “We’re going to keep building on this progress.”
What It Means for Southeast Missouri and Southern Illinois
While Trump hasn’t targeted smaller communities like Cape Girardeau, Sikeston, Carbondale, or Cairo, his rhetoric matters. Federal policy decisions often trickle down, shaping funding, policing priorities, and the national perception of Black communities everywhere.
In Baltimore and Oakland, local officials credit much of their progress to community-based organizations that build trust and tackle the roots of violence. Here in Southeast Missouri and Southern Illinois, grassroots groups and churches have been doing similar work — providing mentorship for youth, food distribution in neighborhoods lacking grocery stores, and violence prevention through outreach.
The concern is that if federal interventions in larger, Black-led cities favor militarized policing over community-driven solutions, those same strategies could be pushed into smaller majority-Black towns like Cairo, Illinois, which has long struggled with disinvestment and negative portrayals.
“Trump is exploiting crime as a wedge issue and a dog whistle,” Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott said. “He has actively undermined efforts that are making a difference saving lives in cities across the country in favor of militarized policing of Black communities.”
A Dangerous Precedent
The Trump actions set a dangerous precedent — one that paints Black leadership as synonymous with failure, no matter what the facts show. It’s a narrative that could also discourage investment in smaller, predominantly Black communities across the Midwest and South.
Nicole Lee, who leads Oakland’s Urban Peace Movement, put it simply: “The things we are doing are working. But bringing in military forces creates fear, not safety.”
That fear isn’t limited to Oakland or Baltimore. Many already worry that heavy-handed approaches to policing will fall hardest on Black youth and families, rather than addressing poverty, unemployment, or lack of healthcare access.
Watching What Happens Next
For now, Black mayors across the nation are standing with D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, who has filed suit against the federal takeover. Leaders here at home are watching closely.
“Black mayors are resilient. We are intrinsically children of struggle,” said Savannah’s Mayor Johnson. “We learn to adapt quickly, and I believe that we will, and we are.”
For Southeast Missouri and Southern Illinois, the lesson is clear: solutions that work — from youth programs to community partnerships — must not be erased or overshadowed by politics. What happens in big cities today could shape the options for smaller communities tomorrow.
Local Spotlight: Community Safety Efforts in Southeast Missouri and Southern Illinois
While Trump paints a picture of “crime-ridden” cities, communities across Southeast Missouri and Southern Illinois are quietly proving that grassroots solutions can reduce violence, strengthen neighborhoods, and offer hope.
A few local examples that mirror strategies credited with success in larger cities:
Cape Girardeau
Sikeston
Cairo, Illinois
Why It Matters
Local organizations are showing that community safety grows from opportunity, culture, and connections, not from federal crackdowns or military patrols.
For communities like Cape, Sikeston, Poplar Bluff the Bootheel and Cairo, that means solutions tailored to local needs from food access to cultural pride —
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