The Headlines - Protests Over Immigration Raids Spread, and Austria Reels From Rare School Shooting
Episode Date: June 11, 2025Plus, a BTS reunion on the horizon?On Today’s Episode: Cities Across U.S. Brace for Protests as Marines Prepare to Deploy in L.A., by Francesca Regalado, John Yoon, Julie Bosman, Eric Schmitt and S...ean KeenanTexas Governor Will Deploy National Guard to Immigration Protests, by Yan ZhuangNorton, D.C.’s Stalwart in Congress, Clings to Seat Amid Signs of Decline, by Annie KarniSouthern Baptists Endorse Effort to Overturn Same-Sex Marriage, by Ruth Graham‘We’re Just Speechless’: Austria Mourns After Deadly School Rampage, by Christopher F. Schuetze and Jim TankersleyK-Pop Fans’ Wait Is Almost Over as BTS Members Leave the Army, by Victor MatherTune in every weekday morning. To get our full audio journalism and storytelling experience, download the New York Times Audio app — available to Times news subscribers on iOS — and sign up for our weekly newsletter.Tell us what you think at: theheadlines@nytimes.com.
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From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Michael Simon Johnson.
Today's Wednesday, June 11th.
Here's what we're covering.
The protests over President Trump's immigration crackdown have expanded.
Demonstrators in at least two dozen cities across the country are pushing back against
raids from Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE.
Move ICE! Get out the way! Get out the way, ICE! Get out the way!
From New York, to Chicago,
We stay like that!
to Austin, Dallas, Atlanta, San Francisco.
Abolish! ICE! Abolish! ICE! Abolish! To Austin, Dallas, Atlanta, San Francisco.
And in Los Angeles, after days of protests, local officials declared a curfew for downtown.
If you do not live or work in downtown LA, avoid the area.
Law enforcement will arrest individuals who break the curfew and you will be prosecuted.
The protests around the country have been largely peaceful and contained to small sections
of cities.
But since Friday, at least 350 demonstrators have been arrested across five cities.
Many were charged with failing to disperse, though some have been accused of looting,
harassment, and throwing Molotov cocktails.
These are insurrectionists, they're agitators,
or troublemakers, at a minimum they're troublemakers.
Trump has promised a harsh response to the demonstrations
and deployed almost 5,000 federal troops to Los Angeles.
California sued the administration over those deployments,
arguing that they're illegal.
And officials there, including Governor Gavin Newsom,
say the president has only inflamed tensions.
Donald Trump's government isn't protecting our communities. They're traumatizing our communities.
And that seems to be the entire point.
And as protests escalate around the country, one U.S. official told the Times the administration
is considering deploying troops to other cities. That could force more clashes with Democratic
governors. But at least one
state leader is on board. In Texas, Republican Governor Greg Abbott announced he would deploy
National Guard troops to quell protests himself. Just over a dozen demonstrators in Texas have
been arrested in the protests. Meanwhile, the ICE raids at the heart of the protests have continued
this week. And last night, the Department of Homeland Security confirmed that in Los Angeles, members
of the National Guard are assisting ICE in those efforts.
ICE posted images on social media of its officers detaining people as armed National Guard troops
stood by.
Today, 700 Marines are expected to join the National Guard in protecting ICE agents and
federal buildings in Los Angeles.
The Times has been looking into a growing number of Washington lawmakers who've held
onto their seats despite showing signs of physical and cognitive decline.
This current Congress has the most members above the age of 70 in modern history.
When this session of Congress was convened in January,
there were nearly 120 members who were 70 or older.
Three of them, all House Democrats, have died this year.
And the House's oldest member,
Democrat Eleanor Holmes Norton of Washington, D.C.,
turns 88 this week.
The civil rights leader said on Tuesday
that she would run for reelection,
only to slightly walk back the comment hours later. Questions about her political future come
as sources tell the Times that in recent years, Norton has become frail and has struggled
to do her job.
I even have some lawmakers on the record being willing to say with all respect to her legacy
and her achievements, it's time for a new generation
at this critical moment to take over.
My colleague Annie Carney covers Congress.
What I heard was just across the board,
concerned about her ability to do the job at this point.
She sometimes doesn't recognize people
she's known for years.
She needs staff to remind her where she is sometimes.
And someone I spoke to who recently met with her
described themselves as shell shocked at how much her staff had to fill in the blanks for her.
This is not an original story at all on Capitol Hill. I mean, we've seen just in the past few
years, the exact playbook play out with Senator Dianne Feinstein, a lion in her prime, a really forceful lawmaker who refused to
let go of her seat, even when it was clear she could not function in that job.
And she eventually died in office in 2023 at the age of 90.
So it is a problem with aging lawmakers who cannot see their own condition and who do
not want to leave.
The Southern Baptist Convention, one of the country's most powerful evangelical organizations,
has officially declared one of its next political targets, same-sex marriage.
The denomination has long opposed gay marriage, but on Tuesday, its members voted for the first time
as an official body to work towards legally ending it in the U.S. The decision was heavily
influenced by the decades-long campaign against abortion. Conservative Christians spent years
on lobbying, messaging, and advocating for anti-abortion judges. And after the Supreme
Court overturned Roe v. Wade three years ago, Southern Baptist
strategists saw a potential blueprint for gay marriage.
Many Southern Baptists acknowledged that gay marriage has widespread support across the
country and that for many Americans, the issue is effectively settled.
But the vote shows that evangelicals have long-term ambitions and are willing to put
in the time.
As Denny Burke, the president of the Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, put it,
quote, we know that we're in a minority in the culture right now,
but we want to be a prophetic minority.
Austria suffered one of its deadliest attacks in modern history on Tuesday, when a gunman
opened fire in a high school in the city of Graz, killing 10 people.
The gunman was then found dead in a school bathroom in what authorities are calling an
apparent suicide.
So far, Austrian police aren't releasing much information about either the victims or the
shooter.
They have said that the gunman was a 21-year-old former student at the school, who they say never graduated.
He had two guns with him during the shooting,
both of which were obtained legally.
It's one of Europe's worst school shootings in years.
Mass shootings of any kind are rare in Europe,
likely due to the low prevalence of guns.
Though Austria is one of the most heavily armed countries
in the world, its civilian
firearm rate is just a quarter of that of the United States, where shootings like these
are far more common. And finally, K-pop fans rejoice because two of its biggest stars, singers RM and V, both
members of the wildly popular boy band BTS, have been discharged from South Korea's mandatory
military service.
This means the band's three-year-long hiatus is one step closer to ending.
The two singers emerged from a military base to cheering fans, despite their record label
pleading with people to stay home and not make a spectacle out of it.
V carried a bouquet of flowers, while RM came out with a saxophone that he used to give
an impromptu performance.
Four of BTS' seven members have now concluded their national service.
Two more, Jimin and Jungkook, will be discharged later today.
The final member, Suga, is scheduled to end his service at the end of next week.
After their time in service, members of the band will soon head back to the studio to make music once again for the other army, their rabid online fan base.
Those are the headlines.
Those are the headlines. Today on The Daily, a look inside an ICE operation as the Trump administration tries to boost
its deportation numbers.
That's next in the New York Times audio app or listen wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Michael Simon Johnson.
We'll be back tomorrow.