Emily Badger
@emmbadger.bsky.social
2.5K followers 710 following 130 posts
New York Times journalist covering cities and urban policy for The Upshot. [email protected], ebadger.21 on Signal
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emmbadger.bsky.social
For perspective in Portland: Former mayor Charlie Hales points out that the city is composed of about 25,000 blocks.

Fewer than 5 of them are touched by the ICE protests Trump has used to portray the city as "on fire" and in need of federal troops.
emmbadger.bsky.social
Thanks for citing it. Wish we'd thought of breaking out the bikeshare members!
emmbadger.bsky.social
Really helpful initial @jeffasher.bsky.social look at crime trends in D.C. during the federal law enforcement surge:
jasher.substack.com/p/re-evaluat...
emmbadger.bsky.social
DC folks! Come have a conversation with us about Home Rule at Solid State on H Street tomorrow night. Historian George Derek Musgrove will join us at 7 p.m. to talk about the epic DC history "Chocolate City."
emmbadger.bsky.social
Thanks for flagging. It looks like the issue is the promo image, not the numbers in the story itself. I'll pass along.
emmbadger.bsky.social
always kind, thank you
emmbadger.bsky.social
Yes! Echoes of the pandemic in this (although that was a bit of a mixed bag: homicides surged for reasons particular to the pandemic, but other crimes fell. Can't steal from people when there are no people around...)
emmbadger.bsky.social
We would love to hear other signs people have observed of this effect, since there are surely some good ones we didn’t think to measure.

www.nytimes.com/2025/09/11/u...
How Trump’s Crime Crackdown Muted Other Parts of D.C. Life
www.nytimes.com
emmbadger.bsky.social
And many residents may feel the costs of attacking crime *in this way* — hurting restaurants and businesses, causing families to keep their children home from school — are not worth the benefits.
emmbadger.bsky.social
All of this other stuff complicates how we should think about any improvements in crime. If you depress everyone’s activity levels, crime is likely to go down. If you depress trust in police, that can be a problem for crime in the future.
emmbadger.bsky.social
Restaurants have been struggling. Year-over-year reservations have generally been up this year. In August they were flat. And D.C. did worse than other comparable U.S. cities.

So far in September, reservations are down from last year.
emmbadger.bsky.social
Bikeshare trips dropped with the federal surge too (this effect didn’t start with new pricing on Aug 1, but with the start of the surge on Aug 11).
emmbadger.bsky.social
Cell phone data from Mapbox shown here confirms several usually hopping neighborhoods had less activity during this time (and less than normal for August):
emmbadger.bsky.social
Measuring this is hard. August is always slow, then school complicates it. A few weeks is a short time to assess data. Some data we looked at showed no clear pattern. But other data backed what many people told us — that D.C. has felt quieter than normal.
emmbadger.bsky.social
Crime has fallen in D.C. during the federal law enforcement surge, faster than it was already dropping this year.

But the show of force appears to have deterred other activity too: foot traffic, dining out, visits by immigrants to food pantries and health clinics.

www.nytimes.com/2025/09/11/u...
How Trump’s Crime Crackdown Muted Other Parts of D.C. Life
www.nytimes.com
emmbadger.bsky.social
If the federal show of force in Washington has had a deterrent effect on crime, it appears to have deterred entirely normal aspects of city life, too.

www.nytimes.com/2025/09/11/u...
Reposted by Emily Badger
maustermuhle.bsky.social
A news tidbit: The D.C. Council has hired a lobbying firm to help fight off the growing interference coming from Republicans in Congress. @chmnmendelson.bsky.social has a dedicated staffer for congressional relations, but the council will now have a much more dedicated presence on the Hill.
emmbadger.bsky.social
Normally (with the exception of next month) it's a regular book club, not an author talk series. So come as a reader! But also, I am making it up as we go...
emmbadger.bsky.social
maybe one day in the future!
emmbadger.bsky.social
Tomorrow night, we're talking about school desegregation and Michelle Adams' "The Containment."
emmbadger.bsky.social
Apropos of nothing for D.C. folks, we're shuffling the upcoming titles at the Reading the City book club at Solid State. In October, George Musgrove will join us to talk about "Chocolate City" and home rule.

www.solidstatebooksdc.com/ssb-read-the...
Reading the City Book Club — Solid State Books
A listing of selections for the book club
www.solidstatebooksdc.com