Having designated “Antifa” a “domestic terrorist organization,” President Donald Trump has signed a memorandum seeking to “dismantle” what he is calling domestic terror “networks” in the wake of a deadly shooting this week at an immigration facility in Texas.
Trump has solely blamed Democratic officials and left-leaning groups for incidents of political violence while largely dismissing evidence against right-wing or other ideologically motivated attacks.
Administration officials have repeatedly argued that Trump’s political opponents are fueling a surge of threats against Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents tasked with carrying out his mass deportation agenda.
In remarks from the White House Thursday, the president claimed Democratic officials and “radical left rhetoric” are “out of control” and “will get to a point where people won’t take it anymore.”
“It’s gonna get worse, and ultimately it’s gonna go back on them,” Trump said, before issuing a thinly veiled threat.
“Bad things happen when they play these games. And I’ll give you a little clue: the right is a lot tougher than the left. But the right’s not doing this … and they better not get them energized, because it won’t be good for the left,” Trump warned. “And I don’t want to see that happen, either. … Radical left Democrats are causing this problem, and it gets worse. It will get to a point where people won’t take it anymore.”
In remarks from the Oval Office Thursday evening, Trump said “we’re looking at the funders of a lot of these groups,” amplifying a conspiracy theory that shadowy financiers are paying “professional” protesters to join demonstrations and unleash violence.
“These are professional anarchists and agitators, and they get hired by wealthy people — some of whom I know, I guess,” Trump said. “You wouldn’t know it at dinner with them, everything’s nice, and then you find out they funded millions of dollars to these lunatics.”
A joint terrorism task force within the FBI is “properly going to chase them down like the domestic terrorists that they are,” FBI director Kash Patel told reporters.
Critics have called Trump’s order a “witch hunt against Trump’s political adversaries.”
“The administration is conjuring vast, imaginary conspiracies as a thinly veiled ruse to crack down on its political opponents, based on their viewpoints,” Robert Weissman, co-president of consumer advocacy organization Public Citizen.
“The Trump project is dangerous, utterly askew from constitutional values and profoundly unAmerican,” he added. “Trump aims to intimidate and silence his political opponents. But the majority of Americans oppose Trump’s authoritarianism and we will not be intimidated.”
.@POTUS signs a National Security Presidential Memorandum establishing a comprehensive strategy to investigate, disrupt, and dismantle all stages of organized political violence and domestic terrorism. pic.twitter.com/aa4kLybllm
— Rapid Response 47 (@RapidResponse47) September 25, 2025
On his Truth Social platform Wednesday, Trump explicitly blamed the shooting in Dallas on “Radical Left Democrats” who are “constantly demonizing Law Enforcement, calling for ICE to be demolished, and comparing ICE Officers to ‘Nazis.’”
Before dying of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, alleged gunman Joshua Jahn, 29, shot three ICE detainees, killing one. No federal or local law enforcement officer was harmed.
Within minutes of the shooting, Patel said there was an “idealogical [sic] motive” behind the attack, and posted an image on X showing four unspent shell casings, with one reading “ANTI ICE” in blue ink. Vice President JD Vance also stated “we know that this person was politically motivated.”
“I AM CALLING ON ALL DEMOCRATS TO STOP THIS RHETORIC AGAINST ICE AND AMERICA’S LAW ENFORCEMENT, RIGHT NOW!” Trump said Wednesday.
The administration is “fully rooting out the Left Wing Domestic Terrorism that is terrorizing our Country,” he said.

Trump’s executive order labeling “Antifa” a “domestic terrorist organization” drew warnings from First Amendment experts and civil rights groups that the president is using the label as a cudgel against left-wing opposition.
The president’s order singles out an antifascist movement and the people who financially support it, though there is no “domestic terrorist organization” designation under U.S. law, and “Antifa” is not a specific organization but a term that encompasses a wider ideologically driven movement against fascism. It’s not clear what legal weight, if any, the order will have.
The latest threats follow months of lawsuits, criminal investigations and arrests targeting his political opponents, international students, media companies and the lawyers and legal groups that support them in a government-wide crackdown on dissent.
The “Antifa” order also follows his instructions to the Department of Justice to immediately prosecute his political enemies as he threatens protesters and donors to progressive groups after the killing of the right-wing activist Charlie Kirk.
Top Justice Department officials are reportedly demanding federal prosecutors across the country launch investigations into billionaire philanthropist George Soros and his Open Society Foundations.
Trump’s latest directives could also force left-leaning donor networks supporting Democratic campaigns and causes to reconsider, pause or withdraw funding over fears that the Trump administration could try to connect them to protests if “Antifa” is present, or if prosecutors consider the organizations “Antifa” themselves, solely because of their political affiliation.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt has suggested that the developers of an app that allows users to crowd source ICE location data could be targeted by the administration. The suspected gunman in Texas allegedly “searched apps that tracked the presence of ICE agents,” according to Patel.
News organizations that reported on the app are “complicit” in threats against ICE, Leavitt claimed Monday.
“We see it every day — they are quick to write a fake story portraying ICE in a negative light, often omitting the real facts of these cases, and they hardly ever write about the vicious criminals that ICE is arresting every day to make our country safer,” Leavitt said.
Between the Jan. 6, 2021 storming of the Capitol and the 2024 election, there were at least 300 cases of political violence in the U.S., marking the largest surge in such attacks since the 1970s, according to a Reuters analysis.
Yet a large body of research has found that right-wing extremists have killed more people than those associated with any other political cause in the United States within the last two decades, though many of those attacks don’t map neatly onto one political ideology.
The FBI is now exploring links between high-profile acts of political violence as the actions of “Nihilistic Violent Extremists” under a wider investigation into “domestic terrorism” that avoids partisan framing.
DOJ is pushing prosecutors to criminally charge George Soros: report
Chicago area center in Trump's immigration crackdown sparks complaints of inhumane conditions
Parents of missing Camp Mystic flood victim call plan to reopen next year 'unthinkable'
Trump quips he’d make TikTok algorithm ‘100% MAGA’ as he signs order for China sale
Alex Jones taken off YouTube hours after rejoining despite MAGA hopes of return
American Airlines refutes claim passenger was forced to change Charlie Kirk shirt