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Housing

Donald Trump wants to 'criminalise' homeless people because it's not 'nice' seeing tents on streets

Before meeting Keir Starmer and picking up his golf clubs, the US president signed two executive orders to remove ‘vagrant criminals’ from American streets and ‘treat homelessness and mental illness as a crime’

US president Donald Trump

Donald Trump signed two executive orders shaping the US's approach to homelessness before jetting off to Scotland. Image: Gage Skidmore

Donald Trump has spent his time in Scotland negotiating a trade deal with the EU, meeting Keir Starmer and playing many rounds of golf. But, before he left the US, he signed two executive orders that saw campaigners accuse him of criminalising homelessness.

The US president signed executive orders promising to shift people on the streets to “long-term institutional settings for humane treatment” in a bid to “restore public order”. 

It was one of the last actions Trump took before flying to Scotland for a four-day visit to his Trump Turnberry golf course. 

“Right outside, there were some tents, and they’re getting rid of them right now, you can’t do that – especially in Washington DC. I talk to the mayor about it all the time, I said you gotta get rid of the tents,” Donald Trump told reports gathered on the White House south lawn as he prepared to jet off to the UK.

“We can’t have it – when leaders come to see me to make a trade deal for billions and billions and even trillions of dollars, and they come in and there’s tents outside of the White House, we can’t have that. It doesn’t sound nice.”

The White House orders also called on states to “end support for Housing First policies that deprioritise accountability and fail to promote treatment, recovery, and self-sufficiency”.

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Housing First is a model that gives rough sleepers a home alongside the support they need to keep it, often for an unlimited time.

The model was first developed in New York in the 90s and has since built a big reputation for tackling street homelessness, most notably in Finland.

White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said the executive orders will instead target “vagrant criminals” on the street.

She said: “By removing vagrant criminals from our streets and redirecting resources toward substance abuse programs, the Trump administration will ensure that Americans feel safe in their own communities and that individuals suffering from addiction or mental health struggles are able to get the help they need.”

The White House said the executive orders came off the back of record-high numbers of people counted as living on the streets. It said 274,224 people were recorded in last year’s count during the Joe Biden administration.

It added: ”The overwhelming majority of these individuals are addicted to drugs, have a mental health condition, or both.”

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But homelessness campaigners have criticised Donald Trump’s move, warning that he is peddling “racist myths” and making efforts to criminalise homelessness will instead make the issue worse.

Donald Whitehead Jr, executive director of the National Coalition for the Homeless, questioning the White House’s assertion about mental health and drug addiction, arguing that this is often a consequence of long-term homelessness rather than a cause.

He added that the “solution to homelessness is housing” and described ensuring people have a safe place to live and access to support as a “moral imperative”.

“Everyone deserves a safe place to live,” said Whitehead Jr. “These executive orders ignore decades of evidence-based housing and support services in practice. They represent a punitive approach that has consistently failed to resolve homelessness and instead exacerbates the challenges faced by vulnerable individuals.”

Meanwhile, a statement from the National Homelessness Law Center described the executive orders as “backwards, expensive, and ineffective policies that make homelessness worse”.

The group argued the executive orders would expand the use of police and institutionalisation of homelessness as well as prioritising funding for states that treat homelessness as a crime.

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It could also reduce harm reduction funding while the group described the prospect of forced treatment as “unethical, ineffective and illegal”.

The move, coupled with DOGE-led cuts to the government budgets for housing and healthcare is likely to see a rise in people forced to live on the streets.

“The National Homelessness Law Center strongly condemns [this] executive order, which deprives people of their basic rights and makes it harder to solve homelessness,” a spokesperson said. “This executive order is rooted in outdated, racist myths about homelessness and will undoubtedly make homelessness worse.”

US leaders have been moving towards a more intensive policing approach to homelessness.

Last summer the US Supreme Court ruled that cities can punish unhoused people for sleeping in public, even if they have nowhere else to go.

In response to that ruling, Balakrishnan Rajagopal, the UN special rapporteur on the right to adequate housing, told Big Issue. “People need to point out that the cost of criminalising homeless people and using the criminal justice system is not cheap, and costs way more than other strategies.”

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The criminalisation of people experiencing homelessness in the UK has also recently been in the spotlight. The Labour government has promised it will scrap the Vagrancy Act next year. The antiquated law has made rough sleeping a criminal offence in England for more than 200 years.

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