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Tag: National Guard

  • Appeals court upholds ruling blocking Trump admin. from deploying National Guard in Illinois

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    BROADVIEW, Ill. (WLS) — As demonstrators kept their fight going outside the Broadview U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility on Saturday, at the same time, a court battle seemed to put an end to federal plans to have the National Guard on Chicago area streets, at least for now.

    The Trump administration on Friday asked an appeals court for an immediate stay of a Chicago federal judge’s ruling this week that blocked the National Guard from deploying in Illinois.

    The 7th Circuit Court of Appeals on Saturday upheld the judge’s ruling, but did partially grant the Trump administration’s request for stay by allowing troops to remain federalized pending their appeal of the judge’s ruling.

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    Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul issued a statement later Saturday, saying, “The court’s order today keeps the troops off the streets of Chicago, Broadview or any other community in Illinois. This is a victory for our state. This is a victory for state and local law enforcement – who know their communities and who protect the right of their communities to speak truth to power.”

    The Department of Justice says the National Guard is needed to protect federal officers from violent attacks and called Judge April Perry’s move to grant the temporary restraining order “extraordinary.”

    Perry wrote in her opinion, after granting the state’s request for that temporary restraining order, that the deployment of the National Guard “is likely to lead to civil unrest.”

    Even as temperatures dropped, protesters’ voices still rang high outside the Broadview ICE detention center.

    Protests continued after local faith leaders held a prayer march to the facility Saturday morning. Their goal was to bring holy communion to detainees. Illinois State Police stationed outside the detention center said they called ICE with the request, which was denied.

    Before heading to the facility, the priests, nuns and community members gathered at a Maywood church for a prayer service.

    Bill Delong, a retired Army veteran visiting from Kentucky, was among the anti-ICE demonstrators in Broadview.

    “We all are Americans until due process,” Delong said. “I love my country, and I don’t know what happened, you know? When you start to see people get rolled up off the streets, hooded up, and thrown in vans; that’s something that we fought against.”

    SEE ALSO | Chicago federal intervention: Tracking surge in immigration enforcement operations | Live updates

    The latest in the legal battle over National Guard deployments comes as protesters and agents have clashed multiple times in the past, ending with arrests.

    Officials said Saturday night that 15 people were arrested by Illinois State Police in connection to protests near the Broadview facility throughout the day. Most charges were resisting, obstruction and disobeying a police officer.

    Illinois Democrats and Republicans remain divided of the deployment of the National Guard to assist federal agents in their ongoing immigration enforcement operation across the Chicago area.

    “This is an intentional attack by this president to divide and separate our communities, but he has finally met his match in the greatest city in the world, in Chicago,” Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson said.

    “I’m in disappointed in general,” Cook County Republican Party Chairman Aaron Del Mar said. “What we’re really trying to do is just implement the immigration laws that currently stands. And unfortunately, the protesters that are out there are disrupting the area to the point where it’s become unsafe for federal officers.”

    Meanwhile, another federal judge ruled the metal fence that was erected outside the Broadview ICE facility must come down by early next week. This comes after the Village of Broadview sued, saying it blocked this public road and could impact first responders getting to a scene.

    READ MORE | Broadview protest arrests, dropped charges influenced ruling to bar National Guard deployments

    Friday marked another day of anti-ICE demonstrations near the Broadview facility.

    Hundreds of people throughout the day could be seen rallying together, but authorities say at least four people were arrested for resisting and obstructing law enforcement.

    Sens. Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth were turned away from trying to visit the Broadview facility on Friday.

    And in a separate decision, a judge granted the village of Broadview’s temporary restraining order, calling for a fence, which was put up by federal agents and blocks a street near the facility, to come down. The government has until 11:59 p.m. on Tuesday to take that fence down.

    The faith community stepped off from St. Eulalia Catholic Church before heading to the Broadview facility. The goal is to attempt to deliver communion people who may be being held at the facility. Broadview’s mayor was also expected to walk.

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  • Trump’s National Guard troops can stay in Illinois but federal judge blocks deployment

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    A judge ruled on Saturday that National Guard troops sent to Illinois by President Donald Trump to combat crime can remain in the state but can’t patrol or deploy to protect federal property. 

    The Trump administration had requested an emergency stay after U.S. District Judge April Perry on Thursday blocked the deployment of National Guard troops in Chicago and across Illinois for at least two weeks. 

    Perry said there was no evidence of a “danger of rebellion” in the state as Trump has suggested he may invoke the Insurrection Act, which would mean the federal government could send troops to states that defy federal laws or don’t put down an insurrection. 

    LONG-HELD SCOTUS PRECEDENTS COULD UNDERCUT PORTLAND, CHICAGO NATIONAL GUARD LAWSUITS

    Illinois State Police stand guard as people including members of the Coalition for Spiritual and Public Leadership (CSPL) gather outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview, Ill., on Saturday.  (AP Photo/Adam Gray)

    “I’d do it if it was necessary. So far it hasn’t been necessary. But we have an Insurrection Act for a reason,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Monday. 

    The Insurrection Act was last invoked in 1992 during the LA riots. 

    “There has been no showing that the civil power has failed,” Perry said. “The agitators who have violated the law by attacking federal authorities have been arrested. The courts are open, and the marshals are ready to see that any sentences of imprisonment are carried out. Resort to the military to execute the laws is not called for.”

    ‘UNTETHERED FROM REALITY’: LAWYERS FOR TRUMP, OREGON, SPAR OVER NATIONAL GUARD DEPLOYMENT IN COURT CLASH

    protester in front of sheriffs deputies in Chicago

    A protester wearing an American flag face-covering stands opposite Cook County Sheriffs outside an ICE facility in Broadview, Ill., on Saturday.  (AP Photo/Adam Gray)

    She added, “Not even Alexander Hamilton could have envisioned one state’s militia to be used against another state’s residents because the President wants to punish those with views other than his own.”

    On Saturday, the federal judge, in granting a temporary restraining order, blocking the deployment of troops until further arguments can be heard, wrote, “Members of the National Guard do not need to return to their home states unless further ordered by a court to do so,” according to the court order obtained by Fox News Digital. 

    Trump speaking in the Oval Office

    A judge ruled on Saturday that National Guard troops sent to Illinois by President Donald Trump can remain but can’t patrol or deploy to protect federal property. (Shawn Thew/EPA/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

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    Along with Chicago, Trump has also sent federal troops to Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., and Memphis.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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  • Tech billionaire Marc Benioff says Trump should deploy National Guard to San Francisco

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    Marc Benioff has become the latest Silicon Valley tech leader to signal his approval of President Trump, saying that the president is doing a great job and ought to deploy the National Guard to deal with crime in San Francisco.

    The Salesforce chief executive’s comments came as he headed to San Francisco to host his annual Dreamforce conference — an event for which he said he had to hire hundreds of off-duty police to provide security.

    “We don’t have enough cops, so if they [National Guard] can be cops, I’m all for it,” he told the New York Times from aboard his private plane.

    The National Guard is generally not allowed to perform domestic law enforcement duties when federalized by the president.

    Last month, a federal judge ruled that Trump’s use of National Guard soldiers in Los Angeles violated the Posse Comitatus Act — which restricts use of the military for domestic law enforcement — and ordered that the troops not be used in law enforcement operations within California.

    Trump has also ordered the National Guard to deploy to cities such as Portland, Ore., and Chicago, citing the need to protect federal officers and assets in the face of ongoing immigration protests. Those efforts have been met with criticism from local leaders and are the subject of ongoing legal battles.

    President Trump has yet to direct troops to Northern California, but suggested in September that San Francisco could be a target for deployment. He has said that cities with Democratic political leadership such as San Francisco, Chicago and Los Angeles “are very unsafe places and we are going to straighten them out.”

    “I told [Defense Secretary] Pete [Hegseth] we should use some of these dangerous cities as training for our military, our national guard,” Trump said.

    Benioff’s call to send National Guard troops to San Francisco drew sharp rebukes from several of the region’s elected Democratic leaders.

    San Francisco Dist. Atty. Brooke Jenkins said she “can’t be silent any longer” and threatened to prosecute any leaders or troops who harass residents in a fiery statement on X.

    “I am responsible for holding criminals accountable, and that includes holding government and law enforcement officials too, when they cross the bounds of the law,” she said. “If you come to San Francisco and illegally harass our residents, use excessive force or cross any other boundaries that the law prescribes, I will not hesitate to do my job and hold you accountable just like I do other violators of the law every single day.”

    State Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) also took to X to express indignation, saying, “we neither need nor want an illegal military occupation in San Francisco.”

    “Salesforce is a great San Francisco company that does so much good for our city,” he said. “Inviting Trump to send the National Guard here is not one of those good things. Quite the opposite.”

    San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie’s office offered a more muted response, touting the mayor’s efforts to boost public safety in general, but declining to directly address Benioff’s remarks.

    Charles Lutvak, a spokesperson for the mayor, noted that the city is seeing net gains in both police officers and sheriff’s deputies for the first time in a decade. He also highlighted Lurie’s efforts to bring police staffing up to 2,000 officers.

    “Crime is down nearly 30% citywide and at its lowest point in decades,” Lutvak said. “We are moving in the right direction and will continue to prioritize safety and hiring while San Francisco law enforcement works every single day to keep our city safe.”

    When contacted by The Times on Friday night, the office of Gov. Gavin Newsom, who vociferously opposed the deployment of National Guard troops in Los Angeles, did not issue a comment in response to Benioff.

    Benioff and Newsom have long been considered friends, with a relationship dating back to when Newsom served as San Francisco’s mayor. Newsom even named Benioff as godfather to one of his children, according to the San Francisco Standard.

    Benioff has often referred to himself as an independent. He has donated to several liberal causes, including a $30-million donation to UC San Francisco to study homelessness, and has contributed to prior political campaigns of former President Obama, former Vice President Kamala Harris, Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), and Hillary Clinton.

    However, he has also donated to the campaigns of former House Speaker Paul Ryan and Sen. John McCain, both Republicans, and supported tougher-on-crime policies and reducing government spending.

    Earlier this year, Benioff also praised the Elon Musk-led federal cost-cutting effort known as the Department of Government Efficiency.

    “I fully support the president,” Benioff told the New York Times this week. “I think he’s doing a great job.”

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  • Salesforce CEO says National Guard should patrol San Francisco — stunning his own PR team | TechCrunch

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    Marc Benioff has long been San Francisco’s liberal-leaning billionaire, the tech executive who funded homeless services, donated to the city’s public schools, and hosted Hillary Clinton fundraisers.

    But in a new, wide-ranging phone interview with the New York Times from his private plane, Benioff revealed a political transformation that seemed to surprise even his own communications team, despite that Salesforce has hundreds of contracts with the federal government.

    The Salesforce founder declared he “fully supported” President Trump and thought National Guard troops should patrol San Francisco streets. He gushed about sitting across from Trump at a Windsor Castle state dinner, telling the president “how grateful I am for everything he’s doing.” He praised Elon Musk’s government efficiency efforts and said he hadn’t closely followed news about immigration raids or Trump’s attacks on the media.

    The 50-minute conversation reportedly ended after Benioff turned to his public relations executive, apparently noticing her expression. “What about the political questions?” he could be heard asking. “Too spicy?”

    Though Benioff’s shift mirrors Silicon Valley’s broader accommodation of Trump, the exchange offered a rare glimpse of just how far that repositioning can go. The question now: will other Bay Area tech CEOs follow Benioff’s lead and call for federal troops in their own backyard?

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  • Florida AG among leaders backing Trump’s use of National Guard

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    Credit: Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok

    President Donald Trump’s novel use of National Guard troops for law enforcement purposes has reopened a debate over states’ authority to control police powers, as dueling briefs from current and former state leaders filed in Illinois’ lawsuit against the president show.

    A bipartisan group of former governors said Trump’s federalization and deployment of National Guard members to Chicago to control “modest” protests upended the careful balance between state and federal powers. 

    At the same time, a group of 17 current Republican attorneys general told the court they supported the administration’s move that they said was necessary to protect immigration enforcement officers.

    Both groups submitted friend-of-the-court briefs in the suit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois Eastern Division brought by Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson to block the Trump administration’s deployment of National Guard troops to the nation’s third-largest city. 

    Trump on Wednesday called for the arrest of Johnson and Pritzker for not assisting Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers, a provocative demand that raised further concerns about his administration’s relationship with state leaders.

    The bipartisan group supported Pritzker and Johnson’s call for a restraining order to block the deployment, while the Republicans said the restraining order should be denied.

    Democratic attorneys general back Oregon 

    In another case, in which Oregon is challenging Trump’s order to deploy troops to Portland, Democratic governors or attorneys general in 23 states and the District of Columbia argued in support of the state’s position.

    Democratic Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, who was among those siding with Oregon, said Wednesday he did so to “put an end to the dangerous overreach of power we are seeing with Donald Trump’s Guard deployments.”

    The brief was also signed by Democratic state officials from Washington state, Maryland, Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Vermont, Wisconsin, Kansas and Kentucky and the District of Columbia’s attorney general.

    Former govs say deployment robs state authority

    The federalist structure of the U.S. government, which bestows powers to both the federal and state governments, leaves broad police power to the states, the bipartisan group wrote. 

    Sending military forces to conduct law enforcement would unbalance that arrangement, they said.

    That group includes Democratic former Govs. Jerry Brown of California, Steve Bullock of Montana, Mark Dayton of Minnesota, Jim Doyle of Wisconsin, Parris Glendening and Martin O’Malley of Maryland, Jennifer Granholm of Michigan, Christine Gregoire, Jay Inslee and Gary Locke of Washington, Tony Knowles of Alaska, Terry McAuliffe of Virginia, Janet Napolitano of Arizona, Deval Patrick of Massachusetts, Bill Ritter Jr. of Colorado, Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas, Steve Sisolak of Nevada, Eliot Spitzer of New York, Ted Strickland of Ohio, Tom Vilsack of Iowa and Tom Wolf of Pennsylvania.

    GOP former Govs. Arne Carlson of Minnesota, Bill Graves of Kansas, Marc Racicot of Montana, Bill Weld of Massachusetts and Christine Todd Whitman of New Jersey also signed the brief.

    “The present deployment of military resources, based on an assertion of nearly unfettered federal authority, is unlawful,” they wrote. “The president’s assertion of authority to deploy military troops on domestic soil based on his unreviewable discretion, and without the cooperation and coordination of state authorities, threatens to upset the delicate balance of state and federal authority that underlies our constitutional order.”

    The Trump administration misunderstands the section of federal law that Trump has relied on to federalize National Guard troops, the group said. 

    The administration’s claim that only the president can decide if the conditions are met for National Guard units to be federalized “not only undermines state sovereignty but also deprives governors of a critical public safety tool,” they wrote.

    “If federalization of the National Guard is unreviewable, a president motivated by ill will or competing policy priorities could divert Guard resources away from critical state needs, including natural disasters or public health crises,” they continued.

    States need ICE enforcement, GOP govs say

    The group of current Republican attorneys general argued their states are harmed by the protests in Chicago and other cities that impede federal ICE officers from doing their jobs.

    The attorneys general are Brenna Bird of Iowa, Austin Knudsen of Montana, Gentner Drummond of Oklahoma, Alan Wilson of South Carolina, Steve Marshall of Alabama, Tim Griffin of Arkansas, James Uthmeier of Florida, Chris Carr of Georgia, Raúl R. Labrador of Idaho, Todd Rokita of Indiana, Lynn Fitch of Mississippi, Catherine Hanaway of Missouri, Michael T. Hilgers of Nebraska, Marty Jackley of South Dakota, Ken Paxton of Texas and John B. McCuskey of West Virginia.

    They described the protests in Chicago as acts of violence that require a strong response.

    “Rather than protest peacefully, some of those protests became violent, threatening federal officers, harming federal property, and certainly impeding enforcement of federal law,” they wrote. “President Trump’s deployment of a small number of National Guard members to defend against this lawlessness is responsible, constitutional, and authorized by statute.”

    The attorneys general added that their states had been harmed by immigrants in the country without legal authorization who had settled in their states, which they said gave the president a public interest purpose in calling up troops to assist. 

    “The President’s action of federalizing the National Guard furthers the public interest because it allows ICE agents to continue to perform their statutory duties of identifying, apprehending, and removing illegal aliens, which is the only way to protect the States from the harms caused by illegal immigration,” they wrote.

    Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Contact Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com. Follow Florida Phoenix on Facebook and Twitter.


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    Trump’s use of National Guard troops for law enforcement purposes has reopened a debate over states’ authority to control police powers

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  • Broadview ICE facility protest expected Friday; DOJ files notice of appeal to National Guard ruling

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    BROADVIEW, Ill. (WLS) — ABC7 is watching to see what happens next with National Guard troops in the Chicago area.

    A federal judge temporarily blocked the deployment to our area, but the Trump administration has already filed a notice of appeal.

    ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch

    The first large-scale weekly demonstration outside the Broadview Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility since that ruling is expected to get underway on Friday morning.

    Based on the judge’s order, for a two-week period, the National Guard is barred from being used in operations, but we will see if they still have a physical presence in Broadview.

    SEE ALSO | Chicago federal intervention: Tracking surge in immigration enforcement operations | Live updates

    Judge April Perry’s decision came hours after the Guard arrived at the Broadview immigration facility on Thursday. Troops could be seen walking around and lingering near the facility.

    The Trump administration has argued that the bolstered military presence is needed to protect federal property and employees. But the judge said the government’s claims about an out-of-control public on the brink of rebellion were not credible.

    The White House responded to the judge’s move to grant a temporary restraining order, writing, in part, “President Trump will not turn a blind eye to the lawlessness plaguing American cities and we expect to be vindicated by a higher court.”

    Protest hours in Broadview are from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily, but it is not clear if demonstrators plan to adhere to the guidance.

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  • Trump Might Get to Send the National Guard Anywhere He Wants

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    Photo: Jamie Kelter Davis/The New York Times/Redux

    What happens if the president believes the streets are on fire and the National Guard must roll out – but a federal judge disagrees? What if reality itself disagrees with the commander-in-chief? Who wins out?

    These questions ultimately will determine the legality of Donald Trump’s deployment of National Guard (and potentially other military assets) in California, Oregon, Illinois, and likely beyond. It’s not so much about whether Trump is correct in his assessment of danger. It’s about who gets to decide.

    The law Trump has cited to activate National Guard troops is not the Insurrection Act – though he has openly contemplated it – but rather an emergency statute titled Section 12406. (Not every statute gets a memorably ominous moniker.) That law permits the president to deploy the Guard, even over the objection of a state governor, in cases of rebellion or foreign invasion, or when “the President is unable with the regular forces to execute the laws of the United States.”

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    If you’re wondering what exactly that third, catch-all category actually means, then you’ve already spotted the key issue. Can the president send in the troops if, for example, the feds could use a few more people to help make drug arrests – which would essentially always be the case? Or would the law require a cataclysmic emergency like a natural disaster or a city-consuming riot? The line probably falls somewhere between those two extremes – but where?

    Trump’s lawyers have identified this ambiguity and exploited it, to mixed success thus far in the courts. When the President deployed the National Guard in California during anti-ICE protests in June, he lost the first round when a federal district court decided Trump was simply wrong, and no such emergency conditions existed. But the (decidedly liberal) Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed that ruling – not so much because Trump was right, but rather because, as president, his determination about the necessity of activating the National Guard was due “a highly deferential standard of review.” The court of appeals found some evidence – not a lot, but enough – that federal property and personnel had been attacked. The Ninth Circuit rejected Trump’s argument that his decision to deploy the National Guard was entirely unreviewable by the courts. But, the court of appeals found, it’s not up to us as judges to overrule the president merely if we disagree with him; we can do that only if he’s patently wrong.

    This week, a Trump-appointed federal judge, Karin Immergut, blocked Trump’s activation of the National Guard in Oregon – notwithstanding the President’s hyperbolic public assertion that “Portland is burning to the ground.” When Trump tried a sneaky end-run hours later by sending National Guard troops from another state to Oregon, the judge smacked that down too. (Predictably, Trump lashed out at his own nominee who, he proclaimed, “ought to be ashamed of herself.”) Judge Immergut adopted the Ninth Circuit’s “highly deferential” standard – giving the president plenty of leeway, but not complete autonomy – and concluded that his determination that National Guard troops were necessary to enforce federal law in Oregon was vastly overstated. But on Thursday, the Ninth Circuit heard the Trump administration’s appeal and reportedly appeared disinclined to block the President’s deployment.

    Late Thursday, a federal judge in Illinois temporarily blocked Trump’s move to activate National Guard troops in the Chicago area. That case surely is headed up to the federal appeals court in short order; expect Trump to argue that it’s his decision, not the court’s, whether emergency conditions necessitate National Guard deployment.

    Eventually one or more of these cases will reach the Supreme Court. That could happen within weeks, given the dizzying pace of the Court’s emergency docket, through which it issues temporary orders that often effectively decide the issue permanently.

    When a case gets there, there’s no way this Supreme Court adopts a rule that allows federal judges to overturn the president merely if they disagree; it’s a certainty the Court will give the president some level of deference. So we’re looking at two realistic outcomes. First, the Supreme Court might find that the “highly deferential” standard is the right one. In that instance, we’ll have an ongoing nationwide game of legal whack–a-mole: the President activates the National Guard in a given state; that state files a lawsuit challenging the deployment in the local federal district court; and then the case makes its way through the appeals courts, potentially right back to the Supreme Court itself. Now multiply that by however many states Trump singles out, and factor in the possibility of  different results in different states. Witness, for example, California, where Trump was allowed to send in the troops, versus Oregon and Illinois, where he has been blocked (for now). It’ll create chaos in the courts and on the ground.

    That brings us to the second potential outcome: the Supreme Court might rule that the federal courts have no role whatsoever in reviewing the President’s activation of the National Guard under Section 12406. Whatever the president says, goes. It sounds drastic, but it’s in play.

    Consider that in the context of the Insurrection Act, the Court ruled (in 1827) that “the authority to decide whether the exigency has arisen belongs exclusively to the President, and … his decision is conclusive upon all other persons.” More recent decisions have chipped away at the margins of this holding, but the fact remains, nearly two hundred years later, that the President has complete or near-complete authority to invoke the Insurrection Act – which is similar, though not identical, to Section 12406, the law at play here.

    Of course, this current Supreme Court has defined itself largely by its expansive view of executive power. The Court already has granted the president shockingly broad criminal immunity. The justices have allowed the President to fire federal officials notwithstanding Congressional statutes that purport to limit that power, and to disregard bureaucratic requirements imposed on the president by Executive Branch bureaucracy. And the current Court has empowered the president to unilaterally withhold billions of dollars in federal funding that had already been allocated by Congress.

    Consider, finally, the practicalities. If the Supreme Court gives judges any power to review the president’s deployment of the National Guard – even under some broadly deferential standard – then we’ll wind up with a cascading series of legal disputes playing out in federal courts across the country, with uncertain and potentially inconsistent outcomes. But if the Supreme Court rules that emergency deployments of the National Guard are entirely up to the president, and unreviewable by the courts, then its game over. No more lawsuits, no more confusion, no more emergency applications to the Court itself.

    I don’t buy that this Supreme Court is in the bag for Trump, or that the conservative justices are enamored with him as a president or as a human being. I do believe that this Court majority has been raised on expansive views of executive authority, and will seek out opportunities to make Federalist Society-inspired think pieces into actual law. You’ll never go broke betting on the justices to take a definitive off-ramp and put an end to a pesky, lingering litigation conundrum – especially if that outcome happens to bolster presidential power.

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  • She lived through the L.A. riots and now is in Chicago. She says Trump is making up urban unrest

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    The streets were quiet just a block from the ICE processing facility where the National Guard deployed Thursday to protect federal agents and property.

    Residents walked their dogs. Kids went to and from school. An Amazon delivery driver parked his van on the side of South 24th Street, turned on his hazard lights and dropped off a few packages — seemingly unhurried or concerned about the dozen people chanting and carrying signs outside the facility on South 25th street.

    Broadview, a suburb of roughly 8,000 people 12 miles west of downtown Chicago, has become a focal point in President Trump’s immigration crackdown in Illinois. It’s where in the last couple of weeks Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents shot a peacefully protesting Presbyterian pastor in the head with a pepper ball, and where dozens of protesters and journalists have been tear-gassed and hit with pepper balls.

    Broadview Mayor Katrina Thompson, 55, shook her head when asked about the military presence, and said the whole situation seemed unnecessary and overblown.

    Broadview Mayor Katrina Thompson.

    (Mayor Katrina Thompson FB)

    “It’s calm in the city of Chicago. It’s no different than most major cities. Sure, it has issues. They all do. But they don’t call for the National Guard,” she said. “The last time I remember a National Guard coming in to a city was with Rodney King. But that was different. People were enraged. There were riots in the streets. People were looting shops and businesses. There is nothing like that happening here.”

    Thompson grew up in Inglewood and graduated from Inglewood High School in 1988. She was in Los Angeles during the 1992 riots and keenly remembers the rage, violence and fear.

    She’s adamant that what happened then has no comparison to what’s happening in Chicago now.

    This week, about 200 Texas National Guard troops and 300 Illinois National Guard troops were deployed to the Chicago area by Trump to protect federal agents and property from protesters. About 20 California National Guard troops were also pulled into political battle, deployed to provide “refresher training,” the North American Aerospace Defense Command said in a statement. “These California National Guard soldiers will not be supporting the Federal Protection Mission in Illinois.”

    On Thursday afternoon, a federal judge in Chicago entered a 14-day temporary restraining order preventing the federalization and deployment of the National Guard in Illinois. U.S. District Judge April Perry said she had “seen no credible evidence that there is a danger of rebellion in Illinois” and described the Trump administration’s version of events as “simply unreliable.” She said National Guard troops would “only add fuel to the fire.”

    In downtown Chicago, people are shopping. Going to work. On Wednesday night, after a protest had formed downtown near the Trump International Hotel & Tower, the streets were nearly deserted. A few young men were seen going into the Elephant & Castle pub near the Chicago Board of Trade building, while a happy-looking couple strolled along the Chicago Riverwalk, holding hands and giggling.

    Thompson said she is not interested in jumping into the national political fray and is focused on the things that are important to her constituents — such as making sure that the streets are clean, that Broadview’s police and firefighters have the resources and support they need, and that her residents feel safe.

    But Thompson did find herself in the spotlight last week when she denied Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem access to the Broadview Municipal Building’s bathroom.

    Thompson said that it was nothing personal, but that Noem showed up, unannounced, with a camera crew and a videographer.

    “She came with a whole bunch of military people dressed in their military gear. And I said I’m not letting you in here. We work here. We don’t know what your intent is. If she had good intentions, you know what professionals do? They call and make an appointment. They don’t show up unannounced with dozens of people carrying guns,” Thompson said.

    Thompson is also suing the federal government for erecting a fence around the ICE facility that she fears could prevent her first responders from getting inside should someone — detainee, ICE agent or government official — need help.

    “When we talk about people having strokes, every second matters,” she said. “If we can’t get to them, that person could be severely disabled for a lifetime, or lose their life because a decision was made — without consulting us — that that’s the way it should be.”

    Outside the facility on Thursday, protesters were outnumbered roughly 4 to 1 by local, county and state law enforcement, as well as local and national media.

    Kate Madrigal, 37, a homemaker, said she had come several times to the site to protest. Her husband is a naturalized citizen and together they have four children.

    She said they live in fear that someone is going to take her husband or scare her kids, and she’s felt compelled to be bear witness and be present because “if my kids ask me what I did during this period to help, I want to tell them I was here. I did something.”

    Next to her were two other women who have also been showing up with sporadic visits — driving from Aurora when their work schedules allow.

    Jen Monaco and Maya Willis said they’ve also felt pulled to the site to keep an eye on the troops and show support for those being detained. Monaco said she often cleans up the debris left behind from the day before, and showed a reporter photos of rubber bullets, empty tear gas casements and spent pepper balls that she’d cleaned up.

    She said until the media showed up in force Thursday, ICE agents had been harassing, scaring, and shooting at protesters with these kinds of crowd control devices. Agents have also shoved and assaulted protesters, they said.

    Cook County sheriff’s police and the Illinois State Police were on scene, occasionally shouting into bullhorns when protesters or reporters crossed the concrete barriers that had been erected to create a protest zone or box.

    At one point, a white man wearing a sombrero, poncho and fake mustache walked around and through the small group of protesters, yelling racial slurs and taunting them. He said he was there to represent “Mexicans for ICE” before taking off his shirt and challenging another protester to a fight.

    The police moved him away but allowed him to continue calling out and chanting. A man in a Chicago Bears T-shirt egged him on and said the man looked like he worked out a lot.

    Two other women showed up around the same time, with wigs, and yelled curses at the ICE officials and National Guard troops on the other side of the new chain-link fence surrounding the facility.

    Thompson has instituted a curfew around the facility, allowing protests to occur only between f 9 a.m. and 6 p.m.

    “We have business in the area and people need to get to work. We’ve got kids who need to get to school,” she said. “Let’s let them do what they need to do, and then you all can come in and protest.”

    But some protesters thought the curfew violated their right to free speech. Robert Held, a Chicago-based trust and estate lawyer, received a citation about 7:45 am for having come to the site before curfew was lifted.

    “I’m not going to pay it,” he said, suggesting he’d heard the violation could cost him $750. “The ordinance is invalidly based. It violates my 1st Amendment rights.”

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  • Trump, the Self-Styled “President of PEACE” Abroad, Makes War at Home

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    The President’s martial rhetoric against fellow-Americans is a striking contrast with his push for an end to hostilities in Gaza.

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  • Live fact-checking Trump’s October Cabinet meeting

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    Live fact-checking Trump’s October Cabinet meeting

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  • Without the Texas National Guard’s help, Broadview protests are calm Wednesday night

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    With the Texas National Guard training nearly 50 miles away, Broadview police maintained control of protesters outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center Wednesday.

    Local authorities ordered about two dozen protesters to leave the village’s “free speech zone” — an area specifically designated for demonstrations against the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement mission — about 20 minutes after the city’s 6 p.m. curfew passed.

    As the police counted down the time left to depart, officers threatened citations and arrests. The demonstrators begrudgingly retreated to the street corner.

    They congregated again there for several minutes before police again ordered them to move.

    “I’ll leave when you answer this question: Do we have rights?” a protester told a Broadview officer who was trying to usher them away.

    The officer unsheathed a pair of pink handcuffs from his right back pocket.

    “Do you want to be the first one?” he replied.

    The protester walked away. The crowd dissipated as night fell.

    The uneventful protest came as Broadview Mayor Katrina Thompson said she expected the Texas National Guard to be in town soon, despite the long-standing objections of state and local officials.

    “The president is blabbing incoherently on national TV about an ‘insurrection’ and the need for ‘protection’ of ICE agents,” she said in a statement. “What nonsense. This is about a military occupation of Broadview. This is about intimidation.”

The troops arrived earlier this week after being federalized by President Donald Trump following a series of intense confrontations between protesters and federal immigration officers taking part in “Operation Midway Blitz.” The majority of clashes have occurred in Broadview, where Immigration and Customs Enforcement has a processing center in the west suburb. Dozens of protesters have been arrested there while trying to impede vehicles and federal agents coming in and out of the facility.

Texas soldiers spent the day drilling at their makeshift base in the far southwest suburbs. The troops could be seen carrying shields and lining up in formation at the U.S. Army Reserve Training Center in Elwood, the sprawling 3,600-acre property expected to house as many as 250 guard members in the coming weeks.

Their arrival has been met with criticism from several Will County officials. About 75 politicians and community leaders gathered in Joliet Wednesday to offer support to immigrant families and stand against ICE operations and the recent arrival of National Guard troops from Texas.

“When I heard the Texas National Guard was staging in Elwood, I felt what so many of us felt — anger, disbelief, heartbreak,” Will County Board member Destinee Ortiz, a Democrat, said during a news conference organized by the Will County Rapid Response Network. “We know what this means … we’ve seen what happens when our government treats families like threats instead of human beings.”

Ortiz this week introduced a resolution asking state and federal authorities to prohibit immigration enforcement activities in courthouses, schools and other community gathering areas. The proposed measure is aimed at reaffirming that “every person deserves dignity, fairness and safety” regardless of their birthplace or background, Ortiz said Wednesday.

Joliet Township Supervisor Cesar Guerrero said he has received calls on a daily basis from residents concerned for their safety.

“Everyday I get calls and messages from concerned neighbors wondering if it is safe to leave their home, if it is safe to go to work today, if it is safe to take their children to school,” he said. “And everyday, I am inspired by the courage and resilience of our community members who find new ways to support each other.”

He lauded Ivette Nunez, property manager at Azteca de Oro, a Joliet banquet facility. Nunez called Joliet police recently when she noticed ICE agents were using her parking lot as a staging area. Joliet police confirmed they responded to the call and asked immigration officials to leave the business’ parking lot.

“I just wanted the community to know we’re supporting our community,” said Nunez, who noted the property has no trespassing signs posted in the parking lot.

The Will County news conference comes just hours before the deadline for the federal government to respond to a lawsuit filed by the state to block the Trump administration from mobilizing National Guard troops here. In court documents filed Monday, the state argued “the American people, regardless of where they reside, should not live under the threat of occupation by the United States military, particularly not simply because their city or state leadership has fallen out of a president’s favor.”

A White House spokeswoman said Trump has used “his lawful authority to protect federal officers and assets.”

Gov. JB Pritzker maintains that there is no emergency in Chicago or elsewhere in Illinois that would warrant deployment of the National Guard and that Trump’s move to do so over his objections is unconstitutional.

With the state awaiting a ruling from a federal judge, possibly as soon as Thursday, on its request for a temporary order blocking Trump’s deployment of Texas and Illinois National Guard members in the Chicago area, Pritzker said the administration “has not communicated with our state in any way whatsoever about what their troop movements are going to be.”

“I can’t believe I have to say ‘troop movements’ in a city in the United States, but that is what we’re talking about,” he said.

Shortly before 8 p.m. in Broadview, a bright floodlight shined down on a lone state police cruiser parked outside the crowd control fence.

There wasn’t a protester in sight.

Originally Published:

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Caroline Kubzansky, Jake Sheridan

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  • National Guard troops are outside Chicago and could be in Memphis soon in Trump’s latest deployment

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    National Guard troops are positioned outside Chicago and could also be in Memphis by Friday, as President Donald Trump’s administration pushes ahead with an aggressive policy — whether local leaders support it or not.Video above: Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson says Trump is “out of control”Troops’ presence at an Illinois Army Reserve center came despite a lawsuit and vigorous opposition from Democratic elected leaders. Their exact mission was not clear, but the Trump administration launched an aggressive immigration enforcement operation in the nation’s third-largest city last month, and protesters have frequently rallied at an immigration building in nearby Broadview.Trump has called Chicago a “hellhole” of crime despite police statistics showing significant drops in crime, including homicides.In Tennessee, Republican Gov. Bill Lee has said troops will be deputized by the U.S. Marshals Service to “play a critical support role” for law enforcement, though that hasn’t been defined yet.Memphis Police Chief Cerelyn Davis said a small group of commanders was already in the city, planning for the arrival of Guard troops.Illinois and Chicago are urging a federal judge to stop “Trump’s long-declared ‘War’” on the state. A court hearing on their lawsuit is scheduled for Thursday. An appeals court hearing over the government’s bid to deploy the Guard to Portland, Oregon, is also scheduled for Thursday. A judge there blocked those efforts over the weekend.Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker has predicted that National Guard troops from the state would be activated, along with 400 from Texas. He has accused Trump of using troops as “political props” and “pawns,” and said he didn’t get a heads-up from Washington about their deployment.The Associated Press on Tuesday saw military personnel in uniforms with the Texas National Guard patch at the U.S. Army Reserve Center in Elwood, 55 miles (89 kilometers) southwest of Chicago. Trucks marked Emergency Disaster Services dropped off portable toilets and other supplies. Trailers were set up in rows. Extra fencing was spread across the perimeter.The Federal Aviation Administration ordered flight restrictions over the Army Reserve Center for security reasons until Dec. 6, meaning the Guard could be there for two months.Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson has barred federal immigration agents and others from using city-owned property as staging areas for enforcement operations.The nearly 150-year-old Posse Comitatus Act limits the military’s role in enforcing domestic laws. However, Trump has said he would be willing to invoke the Insurrection Act, which allows a president to dispatch active duty military in states that are unable to put down an insurrection or are defying federal law.Since starting his second term, Trump has sent or discussed sending troops to 10 cities, including Baltimore, the District of Columbia, New Orleans, and the California cities of Oakland, San Francisco and Los Angeles.Most violent crime around the U.S. has declined in recent years, however. In Chicago, homicides were down 31% to 278 through August, police data shows. Portland’s homicides from January through June decreased by 51% to 17 this year compared with the same period in 2024.In Portland, months of nightly protests at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility continued on Tuesday night. In June, police declared a riot, and there have been smaller clashes since then.Oregon Democratic Gov. Tina Kotek said Tuesday she told Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem there’s “no insurrection” in the state.Noem said on Fox News that she told Portland Mayor Keith Wilson that DHS would “send four times the amount of federal officers” if the city did not boost security at the ICE building, get backup from local law enforcement and take other safety measures.Portland police Chief Bob Day said Tuesday that the department needs to work more closely with federal agents. Fernando reported from Chicago. Associated Press reporters Claire Rush in Portland, Oregon, Adrian Sainz in Memphis, Tennessee, Sarah Raza in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, Scott Bauer in Madison, Wisconsin, Ed White in Detroit, and Hallie Golden in Seattle contributed to this story.

    National Guard troops are positioned outside Chicago and could also be in Memphis by Friday, as President Donald Trump’s administration pushes ahead with an aggressive policy — whether local leaders support it or not.

    Video above: Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson says Trump is “out of control”

    Troops’ presence at an Illinois Army Reserve center came despite a lawsuit and vigorous opposition from Democratic elected leaders. Their exact mission was not clear, but the Trump administration launched an aggressive immigration enforcement operation in the nation’s third-largest city last month, and protesters have frequently rallied at an immigration building in nearby Broadview.

    Trump has called Chicago a “hellhole” of crime despite police statistics showing significant drops in crime, including homicides.

    In Tennessee, Republican Gov. Bill Lee has said troops will be deputized by the U.S. Marshals Service to “play a critical support role” for law enforcement, though that hasn’t been defined yet.

    Memphis Police Chief Cerelyn Davis said a small group of commanders was already in the city, planning for the arrival of Guard troops.

    Illinois and Chicago are urging a federal judge to stop “Trump’s long-declared ‘War’” on the state. A court hearing on their lawsuit is scheduled for Thursday. An appeals court hearing over the government’s bid to deploy the Guard to Portland, Oregon, is also scheduled for Thursday. A judge there blocked those efforts over the weekend.

    Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker has predicted that National Guard troops from the state would be activated, along with 400 from Texas. He has accused Trump of using troops as “political props” and “pawns,” and said he didn’t get a heads-up from Washington about their deployment.

    The Associated Press on Tuesday saw military personnel in uniforms with the Texas National Guard patch at the U.S. Army Reserve Center in Elwood, 55 miles (89 kilometers) southwest of Chicago. Trucks marked Emergency Disaster Services dropped off portable toilets and other supplies. Trailers were set up in rows. Extra fencing was spread across the perimeter.

    The Federal Aviation Administration ordered flight restrictions over the Army Reserve Center for security reasons until Dec. 6, meaning the Guard could be there for two months.

    Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson has barred federal immigration agents and others from using city-owned property as staging areas for enforcement operations.

    The nearly 150-year-old Posse Comitatus Act limits the military’s role in enforcing domestic laws. However, Trump has said he would be willing to invoke the Insurrection Act, which allows a president to dispatch active duty military in states that are unable to put down an insurrection or are defying federal law.

    Since starting his second term, Trump has sent or discussed sending troops to 10 cities, including Baltimore, the District of Columbia, New Orleans, and the California cities of Oakland, San Francisco and Los Angeles.

    Most violent crime around the U.S. has declined in recent years, however. In Chicago, homicides were down 31% to 278 through August, police data shows. Portland’s homicides from January through June decreased by 51% to 17 this year compared with the same period in 2024.

    In Portland, months of nightly protests at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility continued on Tuesday night. In June, police declared a riot, and there have been smaller clashes since then.

    Oregon Democratic Gov. Tina Kotek said Tuesday she told Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem there’s “no insurrection” in the state.

    Noem said on Fox News that she told Portland Mayor Keith Wilson that DHS would “send four times the amount of federal officers” if the city did not boost security at the ICE building, get backup from local law enforcement and take other safety measures.

    Portland police Chief Bob Day said Tuesday that the department needs to work more closely with federal agents.

    Fernando reported from Chicago. Associated Press reporters Claire Rush in Portland, Oregon, Adrian Sainz in Memphis, Tennessee, Sarah Raza in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, Scott Bauer in Madison, Wisconsin, Ed White in Detroit, and Hallie Golden in Seattle contributed to this story.

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  • Trump Calls Democrats the Party of “Satan” as Blue States Are Hit With Funding Cuts, National Guard Deployments

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    While administration officials have insisted that they are merely trying to save the taxpayers money, and absolutely not targeting blue states out of, say, spite, the message from the president has been…slightly different. For one thing, he called the prospect of further cutting “Democrat agencies” an “unprecedented opportunity,” and posted a video on Truth Social last week that featured Vought as the grim reaper coming for Democrats. “By and large, during a shutdown a president seeks to minimize the pain on the American public. That’s not the case this time,” Senator Alex Padilla told Politico. “Donald Trump, Russell Vought, and [White House deputy chief of staff] Stephen Miller and everybody around him are very intentional about exploiting the shutdown to make it more painful for people and constituencies that they deem the enemy. That’s absolutely un-American.” Matthew Lawrence, a law professor at Emory University, told the Times Trump’s actions are without precedent, saying, “I can’t think of a historical parallel of an administration publicly cutting funds in a shutdown like this.”

    Of course, the president’s targeting of blue states via budget cuts comes as he has ordered the National Guard to Washington, DC; California; Chicago; and Oregon. On Sunday, the president told US naval recruits, “We have to take care of this little gnat that’s on our shoulder called the Democrats,” days after he told military generals to “handle” the “enemy from within.” (Over the weekend, Judge Karin Immergut—a Trump appointee—twice blocked the administration’s attempt to deploy National Guard troops in Oregon, writing in her first decision, “This is a nation of Constitutional law, not martial law,” and saying the DOJ’s arguments for doing so “risk blurring the line between civil and military federal power—to the detriment of this nation.” On Monday, the state of Illinois and the city of Chicago filed a suit against the Trump administration to block it from sending Guard members from elsewhere in the country into the state and from federalizing the Illinois National Guard; a judge gave the administration until Wednesday night to respond.) The National Guard has also been deployed to Memphis, though the move has been welcomed by Governor Bill Lee. (Memphis mayor Paul Young says he is “certainly not happy” with the deployment.)

    On Monday, Department of Homeland Security assistant secretary for public affairs Tricia McLaughlin defended the administration’s deployment of the National Guard to cities that do not want the military presence—like Chicago—saying Democratic leaders are “aiding and abetting domestic terrorists.”

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    Bess Levin

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  • What Is Happening With Trump’s National Guard Takeovers?

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    Federal agents, including members of the Department of Homeland Security, Border Patrol, and the police, attempt to keep protesters back outside a downtown U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Portland, Oregon, on October 5.
    Photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images

    Donald Trump has made exerting federal power over the states a hallmark of his second term, attempting a takeover of Washington, D.C., and vowing to deploy the National Guard into the streets of American cities as he sees fit. But the president took another unprecedented move over the weekend as he green-lit the deployment of guardsmen from other states to Illinois and Oregon in stark defiance of their leaders and a court order.

    Illinois governor J.B. Pritzker announced on Sunday that Trump had ordered 400 members of the Texas National Guard to Illinois, Oregon, and other locations in what he deemed “Trump’s Invasion.” The Democratic governor noted on social media that no government officials called him directly to discuss the deployment. “I call on Governor Abbott to immediately withdraw any support for this decision and refuse to coordinate. There is no reason a President should send military troops into a sovereign state without their knowledge, consent, or cooperation,” he wrote.

    Texas governor Greg Abbott, a Republican, confirmed that he gave his full authorization to the Trump administration to call up his state’s guardsmen to “ensure safety for federal officials.” But his state was not the only one.

    The Trump administration moved to send 300 members of the California National Guard to Portland, Oregon, prompting a legal challenge from California governor Gavin Newsom. “We’re suing Donald Trump. His deployment of the California National Guard to Oregon isn’t about crime. It’s about power. He is using our military as political pawns to build up his own ego. It’s appalling. It’s un-American. And it must stop,” he wrote on social media.

    The president’s move to utilize troops from California and Texas appeared to be an attempt to circumvent a decision from a federal judge on Saturday that temporarily blocked Trump from deploying the National Guard in Portland, a city that he has described as “war ravaged” and “under siege” from domestic terrorists. Per the Associated Press, Trump intended to federalize 200 Oregon National Guardsmen to protect federal buildings in the city following consistent protests at the city’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility. But U.S. District Judge Karin Immergut, a Trump appointee, determined that conditions in the city did not justify such a deployment. “The President’s determination was simply untethered to the facts,” she wrote in her decision, per the AP.

    Trump’s attempt to involve other states over the weekend prompted an emergency hearing from Immergut late on Sunday evening. The New York Times reports that the judge declared that the president’s move to utilize the California and Texas National Guards was “ in direct contravention” of her initial order. Immergut expanded her initial ruling to bar the “relocation, federalization or deployment of members of the National Guard of any state or the District of Columbia in the state of Oregon.”

    The Trump administration had already filed an appeal against Immergut’s Saturday ruling to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. But federal officials have denounced the judge’s decision in vitriolic terms, signaling a likely prolonged fight on this issue. “Today’s judicial ruling is one of the most egregious and thunderous violations of constitutional order we have ever seen — and is yet the latest example of unceasing efforts to nullify the 2024 election by fiat,” deputy White House chief of staff Stephen Miller posted online.

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt denounced Immergut’s rulings during a Monday briefing, calling them”untethered in reality and in the law.” When pressed by reporters who said Portland officials have pushed back on Trump’s characterization of the city’s conditions, Leavitt suggested they must have spoken to “partisan Democrat officials.”

    As the White House continues to defend its actions, another challenge to the federal government’s tactics emerged on Monday. The Illinois attorney general’s office, in conjunction with the city of Chicago, filed a lawsuit challenging the administration’s deployment of the Texas guardsmen as well as the attempted federalization of the Illinois National Guard in the city. “The American people, regardless of where they reside, should not live under the threat of occupation by the United States military, particularly not simply because their city or state leadership has fallen out of a president’s favor,” the filing read. A hearing in the matter has been scheduled for Monday afternoon.


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    Nia Prater

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  • Chicago mayor creates ‘ICE-free zones’ to block federal agents from city property

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    Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson signed an executive order Monday prohibiting federal immigration agents from using city-owned property for immigration enforcement operations, as the Trump administration deploys National Guard troops to Illinois.

    Johnson established the “ICE-free zones” — referring to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) — as part of his Protecting Chicago Initiative, rejecting President Donald Trump’s crime crackdown and deportation rollout in the city.

    “Today, we are signing an executive order aimed at reining in this out-of-control administration,” Johnson said during a news conference on Monday. “The order establishes ICE-free zones. That means that city property and unwilling private businesses will no longer serve as staging grounds for these raids.”

    As Chicago seeks to thwart ICE’s deportation efforts, Johnson and Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker filed a lawsuit Monday, attempting to block the Trump administration from deploying National Guard troops to Illinois. 

    PRITZKER SUES TRUMP TO BLOCK NATIONAL GUARD ACTION IN ILLINOIS

    Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson has rejected President Donald Trump’s plan to deploy National Guard troops to Chicago. (Kamil Krazaczynski/Getty Images)

    “The Trump administration must end the war on Chicago,” Johnson said. “The Trump administration must end this war against Americans. The Trump administration must end its attempt to dismantle our democracy.”

    WHITE HOUSE MOCKS ‘SLOB’ PRITZKER AFTER HE REJECTS TRUMP’S NATIONAL GUARD PLAN

    During his remarks, Johnson accused the “extreme right” of refusing to accept the results of the Civil War, when slavery was abolished.

    “They have repeatedly called for a rematch, but in the coming weeks, we will use this opportunity to build greater resistance. Chicagoans are clear that militarizing our troops in our city as justification to further escalate a war in Chicago will not be tolerated,” he said. 

    “The right wing in this country wants a rematch of the Civil War,” Johnson repeated during the news conference. 

    Johnson said Chicago would “not tolerate ICE agents violating our residents’ constitutional rights” or the Trump administration’s “disregard” for local authority. 

    President Donald Trump visits the U.S. Park Police Anacostia Operations Facility

    President Donald Trump visits the U.S. Park Police Anacostia Operations Facility on Aug. 21, 2025, in Washington, D.C.  (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    “With this executive order, Chicago stands firm in protecting the constitutional rights of our residents and immigrant communities and upholding our democracy,” Johnson said. 

    Johnson has directed Chicago agencies and departments to identify spaces within the next five days that have been targeted during ICE raids and post a clear message to federal immigration officers that the city-owned property would not be used for immigration enforcement, including as a staging area, processing location or operations base. 

    “If the federal government violates this executive order, we will take them to court,” Johnson said, urging Trump to leave Chicago “the freak alone.”

    Pritzker, long considered a potential 2028 presidential candidate, said Sunday that he refused to comply with the Trump administration’s “ultimatum” to deploy Illinois National Guard troops, calling it “absolutely outrageous and un-American.”

    “We must now start calling this what it is: Trump’s invasion,” Pritzker said. 

    JB Pritzker delivers remarks in D.C.

    Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker speaks at the office of the Center for American Progress event on March 18, 2025, in Washington, D.C.  (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    After Pritzker refused to deploy his own troops, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott authorized Trump to send 400 Texas National Guard members to Illinois and Oregon.

    The White House ridiculed Pritzker on Monday for rejecting Trump’s deployment of national guardsmen to Illinois to combat crime.

    “Chicago is descending into lawlessness and chaos because this slob cares more about boosting his anti-Trump creds on X than he does about making his city safe,” White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson told Fox News Digital. 

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    “Pritzker should be ashamed of himself,” she said.

    The White House and the Department of Homeland Security did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s comment request. 

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  • Federal judge blocks Trump’s National Guard deployment to Portland amid constitutional challenge

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    A federal judge blocked President Donald Trump’s efforts to deploy National Guard troops into Portland in a late-night decision on Sunday.

    U.S. District Judge Karin Immergut ruled the action was unlawful and unconstitutional, issuing an emergency temporary restraining order to halt the deployment of California’s National Guard. The order also bars the use of troops from any other state or Washington, D.C. in Oregon.

    Immergut’s ruling says that the Trump administration’s action violates federal statute 10 U.S.C. §12406 and the Tenth Amendment.

    “It appears to violate both 10 U.S.C. §12406 and the Tenth Amendment,” Immergut said during the proceeding, according to reporting from Adam Klasfeld of AllRise News.

    NEWSOM SUES TRUMP ADMINISTRATION OVER CALIFORNIA NATIONAL GUARD DEPLOYMENT ORDER TO OREGON

    U.S. District Judge Karin Immergut blocked President Donald Trump’s plan to deploy National Guard troops to Portland, ruling the action unconstitutional. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    Immergut also pressed Justice Department attorney Eric Hamilton on why the DOJ continued to pursue troop movements.

    “How could bringing in federalized National Guard from California not be in direct contravention of the TRO that I issued yesterday?” she asked.
    “You’re an officer of the court. Aren’t defendants circumventing my order?”

    Hamilton went on to deny any wrongdoing but did offer a defense to which Immergut pushed back.

    “You have to have a colorable claim that Oregon conditions warrant deploying the National Guard — you don’t.”

    TRUMP’S ‘WAR-RAVAGED PORTLAND’ NATIONAL GUARD DEPLOYMENT HALTED BY FEDERAL JUDGE OVER AUTHORITY CONCERNS

    Law enforcement stand in front of tear gas cloud

    Law enforcement officers stand in tear gas outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility during a protest on Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025, in Portland, Oregon. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane)

    Oregon’s Scott Kennedy said it felt like “a game of rhetorical Whac-A-Mole” and referenced reports that Trump may be considering sending Texas National Guard troops to Chicago.

    DOJ representatives requested a stay, but Immergut denied both the stay and the administrative delay, saying it was an “emergency” and there were no new facts to justify the request to change her previous ruling.

    “I’m handling this on an emergency basis with limited briefing,” she said. “No new information has been provided about any new issues in Portland.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks

    Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks after U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer granted an emergency temporary restraining order to stop President Trump’s deployment of the California National Guard.  (Santiago Mejia/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)

    California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) immediately took to X to boast.

    “BREAKING: We just won in court — again. A federal judge BLOCKED Donald Trump’s unlawful attempt to DEPLOY 300 OF OUR NATIONAL GUARD TROOPS TO PORTLAND. The court granted our request for a Temporary Restraining Order — HALTING ANY FEDERALIZATION, RELOCATION, OR DEPLOYMENT of ANY GUARD MEMBERS TO OREGON FROM ANY STATE. Trump’s abuse of power won’t stand,” the post stated.

    The Justice Department has made indications that it will be appealing the ruling with arguments that the president retains authority under federal law to deploy National Guard forces in cases of “domestic unrest.”

    Fox News’ Lee Ross contributed to this report.

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  • Pritzker says Trump ordering 400 members of the Texas National Guard to Illinois, Oregon and other locations

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    Illinois Governor JB Pritzker announced on Sunday that President Donald Trump will deploy 400 members of the Texas National Guard to Illinois, Oregon and other locations.

    The deployment came as protests against federal law enforcement ramp up across the country, particularly in Portland and Chicago.

    In the Windy City, multiple people were arrested in recent days for reportedly ramming their vehicles into DHS and ICE agents’ cars.

    After announcing Trump’s deployment on X late Sunday, Pritzker wrote that “no officials from the federal government called me directly to discuss or coordinate.”

    CHICAGO ANTI-ICE PROTESTERS BLOCK VEHICLES, GET HIT WITH TEAR GAS AND PEPPER BALLS

    Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker criticized President Trump’s decision to deploy 400 Texas National Guard troops to Illinois and Oregon. (Getty Images)

    “We must now start calling this what it is: Trump’s Invasion,” the Democratic governor wrote.

     “It started with federal agents, it will soon include deploying federalized members of the Illinois National Guard against our wishes, and it will now involve sending in another state’s military troops.”

    Pritzker also disclosed that he called Texas Governor Greg Abbot to “immediately withdraw any support for this decision and refuse to coordinate.”

    ANTI-ICE PORTLAND RIOTERS WITH GUILLOTINE CLASH WITH POLICE IN WAR-LIKE SCENES

    Law enforcement clashes with anti-ICE protesters

    Police clash with demonstrators during a protest outside an immigrant processing and detention center on Oct. 3, 2025 in Broadview, Illinois. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

    “There is no reason a President should send military troops into a sovereign state without their knowledge, consent, or cooperation,” the governor added.

    “The brave men and women who serve in our national guards must not be used as political props. This is a moment where every American must speak up and help stop this madness.”

    In response, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott defended his decision, writing on X that he had “fully authorized the President to call up 400 members of the Texas National Guard to ensure safety for federal officials.”

    Law enforcement stand in front of tear gas cloud

    Law enforcement officers stand in tear gas outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility during a protest on Saturday, Oct. 4, 2025, in Portland, Ore. (AP Photo/Jenny Kane) (AP Photo/Jenny Kane)

    He then added that federal and state leaders must “either fully enforce protection for federal employees or get out of the way and let the Texas Guard do it,” while praising the Guard’s “training, skill and expertise.”

    Abbott also noted that thousands of Texas National Guard troops have remained along the southern border to assist with security operations.

    In recent days, large numbers of protesters have rioted against immigration enforcement actions across the country. ICE shared a video of a Portland protester being wheeled into custody on Sunday.

    GIF of suspect being rolled away

    ICE shared a video showing a suspect being rolled away on a flatbed cart in Portland, Oregon. (@ICEgov via X)

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    In Broadview, Illinois, on Friday, more than a dozen people were arrested by federal agents during protests at an ICE processing facility. Agents were seen firing pepper balls, tear gas and rubber bullets to clear crowds.

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  • President Trump is sending 300 Cal Guard to Oregon and Newsom says he’ll sue

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    Governor Gavin Newsom today issued the following statement in response to the Trump Administration deploying 300 California National Guard personnel into Portland, Oregon, after a federal district court blocked the attempted federalization of Oregon’s National Guard:“In response to a federal court order that blocked his attempt to federalize the Oregon National Guard, President Trump is deploying 300 California National Guard personnel into Oregon. They are on their way there now. This is a breathtaking abuse of the law and power. The Trump Administration is unapologetically attacking the rule of law itself and putting into action their dangerous words — ignoring court orders and treating judges, even those appointed by the President himself, as political opponents.This isn’t about public safety, it’s about power. The commander-in-chief is using the U.S. military as a political weapon against American citizens. We will take this fight to court, but the public cannot stay silent in the face of such reckless and authoritarian conduct by the President of the United States.” —Governor Gavin NewsomTrump illegally sends California troops to OregonDespite a federal court order finding no legal basis to deploy state National Guard troops to the streets of Portland and ordering that control of the Oregon National Guard be returned to state command, the Trump Administration is now sending 300 federally controlled members of the California National Guard to Portland to take their place. The troops had originally been federalized months ago in response to unrest in Los Angeles — conditions that never necessitated their deployment in the first place, and have long since subsided anyway. Courts rebuke Trump’s lawlessnessIn its ruling yesterday, the federal judge appointed by President Trump rejected the Trump Administration’s justification for deploying federalized troops, writing in its order: “This historical tradition boils down to a simple proposition: this is a nation of Constitutional law, not martial law. Defendants have made a range of arguments that, if accepted, risk blurring the line between civil and military federal power — to the detriment of this nation.”The court found that the President’s own statements regarding the deployment of federalized National Guard were not “conceived in good faith” and were “simply untethered to the facts.”

    Governor Gavin Newsom today issued the following statement in response to the Trump Administration deploying 300 California National Guard personnel into Portland, Oregon, after a federal district court blocked the attempted federalization of Oregon’s National Guard:

    “In response to a federal court order that blocked his attempt to federalize the Oregon National Guard, President Trump is deploying 300 California National Guard personnel into Oregon. They are on their way there now. This is a breathtaking abuse of the law and power. The Trump Administration is unapologetically attacking the rule of law itself and putting into action their dangerous words — ignoring court orders and treating judges, even those appointed by the President himself, as political opponents.

    This isn’t about public safety, it’s about power. The commander-in-chief is using the U.S. military as a political weapon against American citizens. We will take this fight to court, but the public cannot stay silent in the face of such reckless and authoritarian conduct by the President of the United States.” —Governor Gavin Newsom

    Trump illegally sends California troops to Oregon

    Despite a federal court order finding no legal basis to deploy state National Guard troops to the streets of Portland and ordering that control of the Oregon National Guard be returned to state command, the Trump Administration is now sending 300 federally controlled members of the California National Guard to Portland to take their place. The troops had originally been federalized months ago in response to unrest in Los Angeles — conditions that never necessitated their deployment in the first place, and have long since subsided anyway.

    Courts rebuke Trump’s lawlessness

    In its ruling yesterday, the federal judge appointed by President Trump rejected the Trump Administration’s justification for deploying federalized troops, writing in its order:

    “This historical tradition boils down to a simple proposition: this is a nation of Constitutional law, not martial law. Defendants have made a range of arguments that, if accepted, risk blurring the line between civil and military federal power — to the detriment of this nation.”

    The court found that the President’s own statements regarding the deployment of federalized National Guard were not “conceived in good faith” and were “simply untethered to the facts.”

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  • Trump’s National Guard deployment in Portland, Oregon halted as Chicago braces for troops

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    President Donald Trump’s crime and immigration crackdown hit a legal roadblock in Portland, Oregon, as new details emerged about the administration’s plan to send federal troops into Chicago. On Saturday, a federal judge temporarily blocked Trump’s effort to federalize 200 members of the Oregon National Guard. U.S. District Judge Karin Immergut said the plan to send troops to Portland likely overstepped Trump’s authority and threatened state sovereignty. “This is a nation of Constitutional law, not martial law. Defendants have made a range of arguments that, if accepted, risk blurring the line between civil and military federal power — to the detriment of this nation,” Immergut said. The decision was celebrated by state and local leaders who brought the lawsuit, but the White House vowed to appeal. “President Trump exercised his lawful authority to protect federal assets and personnel in Portland following violent riots and attacks on law enforcement — we expect to be vindicated by a higher court,” said White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson. An Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility in Portland has been at the center of recent protests. On Saturday, hundreds marched to the building, prompting federal agents to deploy tear gas, among other crowd-control munitions. At least six people were arrested. Similar demonstrations and a similar debate have been playing out in Chicago. On Saturday, the Department of Homeland Security said federal agents shot and injured one woman during what the agency described as a “defensive” response to an alleged vehicle-ramming attack. On Saturday, Trump authorized 300 troops to protect federal officers and assets in Chicago, despite opposition from Illinois Democratic Governor J.B. Pritzker. The timeline of the National Guard’s arrival was not immediately clear. More from our Washington Bureau:

    President Donald Trump’s crime and immigration crackdown hit a legal roadblock in Portland, Oregon, as new details emerged about the administration’s plan to send federal troops into Chicago.

    On Saturday, a federal judge temporarily blocked Trump’s effort to federalize 200 members of the Oregon National Guard. U.S. District Judge Karin Immergut said the plan to send troops to Portland likely overstepped Trump’s authority and threatened state sovereignty.

    “This is a nation of Constitutional law, not martial law. Defendants have made a range of arguments that, if accepted, risk blurring the line between civil and military federal power — to the detriment of this nation,” Immergut said.

    The decision was celebrated by state and local leaders who brought the lawsuit, but the White House vowed to appeal.

    “President Trump exercised his lawful authority to protect federal assets and personnel in Portland following violent riots and attacks on law enforcement — we expect to be vindicated by a higher court,” said White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson.

    An Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility in Portland has been at the center of recent protests. On Saturday, hundreds marched to the building, prompting federal agents to deploy tear gas, among other crowd-control munitions. At least six people were arrested.

    Similar demonstrations and a similar debate have been playing out in Chicago. On Saturday, the Department of Homeland Security said federal agents shot and injured one woman during what the agency described as a “defensive” response to an alleged vehicle-ramming attack.

    On Saturday, Trump authorized 300 troops to protect federal officers and assets in Chicago, despite opposition from Illinois Democratic Governor J.B. Pritzker. The timeline of the National Guard’s arrival was not immediately clear.

    More from our Washington Bureau:

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  • Video: How Trump’s National Guard Deployments Break With Military Tradition

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    new video loaded: How Trump’s National Guard Deployments Break With Military Tradition

    By sending troops to U.S. cities that are not in active crisis, President Trump is breaking with military tradition. Helene Cooper, who covers national security issues for The New York Times, compares his recent actions with earlier domestic military deployments.

    By Helene Cooper and Christina Thornell

    October 5, 2025

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    Helene Cooper and Christina Thornell

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