US President Donald Trump, joined by Tennessee's Republican Governor Bill Lee, on Monday established a task force to take on crime in Memphis, Tennessee.

The Democratic-led city is the second to face a Trump administration crackdown on crime, following Washington DC.

Trump has vowed to fix the city after shelving plans for a similar operation in Chicago, reportedly due to opposition from local and state officials.

Memphis' mayor, Paul Young, also has voiced opposition to the plan, arguing that crime already is falling without federal intervention.

The president stated that Memphis is overrun with carjackings, robberies, and shootings. We're not going to allow this kind of savagery to destroy our society anymore, Trump declared at a memorandum-signing in the Oval Office.

He asserted that the task force would be a replica of efforts made in Washington DC, involving federal agencies such as the National Guard, FBI, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) and the Department of Justice.

Governor Lee expressed support for federal resources, saying he was working on a plan to utilize state and federal aid in Memphis.

However, local leaders including Mayor Young are apprehensive about the deployment of the National Guard, voicing concerns about how federal actions will be conducted in the community.

Statistics reveal that Memphis has a high rate of violent crime, prompting this federal focus as Trump aims to extend his crime-fighting initiatives to other cities like Chicago and St. Louis.

The move has sparked debate over the legality and necessity of military involvement in domestic policing, with local polls indicating a lack of support for such interventions among residents.