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The Trump administration has declared Antifa as a terrorist organization. The President also said that he “will also be strongly recommending that those funding ANTIFA be thoroughly investigated in accordance with the highest legal standards and practices.”
Liberal organizations are saying that Antifa isn’t real. Oh yes it is.
Antifa is a decentralized but organized movement with networks, funding streams, and a long track record of violence — from riots and arson to assaults on journalists and police. Pretending it doesn’t exist is gaslighting. Americans have seen the black bloc mobs in Portland, Seattle, and beyond. They aren’t imaginary. They are coordinated, destructive, and proud of it.
Here’s the thing: the U.S. government has a formal system for labeling foreign terrorist organizations (FTOs), but not domestic ones. So when the Trump administration declares Antifa a terrorist organization, it’s political more than legal.
What it does do: it gives federal agencies cover to ramp up surveillance, investigate funding, and treat Antifa with the same urgency they’d give to an overseas network.
What it doesn’t do: it doesn’t create a new category of domestic crimes. Rioting, arson, and assault were already illegal. Trump’s declaration is about political will, not new legal powers.