President Donald Trump's 30-day public emergency declaration in Washington DC is set to expire after Sept. 10, ending the federal takeover of the city's police department but not the presence of the military in the nation's capital.
Trump's deployment of thousands of National Guard troops to Washington aren't affected by the deadline and will remain on the city's streets.
Here's what we know as the takeover of DC's Metropolitan Police Department ends.
What happens after the 30-day mark?
Trump on Aug. 11 signed an executive order declaring a crime emergency in Washington DC, invoking a section in the federal Home Rule Act of 1973 that allows him to direct DC to give his administration control of the police department for 30 days.
The Republican two-term president tapped Attorney General Pam Bondi to take temporary command of DC's police department and named Terry Cole, administrator of the Drug Enforcement Agency, the interim federal commissioner of the police department.
Political Glance
Charlie Kirk, the powerful rightwing activist, Trump ally and executive director of Turning Point USA (TPUSA), was shot on Wednesday while hosting an event in Utah and is in critical condition at a hospital.
A federal judge has ruled that Federal Reserve board member Lisa Cook can stay in her post while suing Donald Trump over his unprecedented bid to fire her.
Federal agents can resume sweeping immigration operations in Los Angeles after the US supreme court lifted an order barring the Donald Trump administration from stopping people solely based on their race, language or job.





























