Presidents/Donald J. Trump/Executive Order
Executive Order14333 Within Constitutional Authority

Executive Order 14333—Declaring a Crime Emergency in the District of Columbia

Issued 2025-08-11 by Donald J. Trump

Plain-English Overview

AI-generated summary explaining what this action does, who it affects, and why it matters

On August 10, 2025, President Donald J. Trump issued Executive Order 14333, titled "Declaring a Crime Emergency in the District of Columbia." This order declares a crime emergency in the District of Columbia. It also determines that special emergency conditions require the use of the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia for Federal purposes, including maintaining law

AI-generated summary for educational purposes

Constitutional Analysis

How this action fits (or doesn't) within Article II authority and existing law

Executive Order 14333 addresses "Declaring a Crime Emergency in the District of Columbia". The President's stated reasoning: "the Nation s broader interests without fear of our workers being subjected to rampant violence." Executive orders are a long-established exercise of presidential power, used by every President since George Washington. They are grounded in Article II of the Constitution, which vests executive power in the President and directs them to "take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed."

Executive orders cannot create new law, contradict existing federal statutes, or exceed the President's constitutional authority. The legitimacy of any specific order depends on whether it operates within statutory authority Congress has delegated, directs the executive branch on matters within its constitutional purview, or attempts to substitute executive policy for legislative choices. Courts can and do review executive orders for conformity with the Constitution and federal law.

Official Summary

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