Supreme Court rejects Trump's bid to deploy National Guard in Illinois
- On Dec. 23, the U.S. Supreme Court turned away the Trump administration's emergency request to deploy National Guard troops in Chicago, allowing federalization but barring deployment.
- The administration argued troops were needed to protect federal immigration agents amid Chicago’s dangers, while the State of Illinois and City of Chicago said the move violated the 10th Amendment and Posse Comitatus, accusing the president of political motives.
- U.S. District Judge April Perry found no credible evidence of rebellion and issued a temporary restraining order, a conclusion the Chicago-based 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals largely upheld.
- The decision is preliminary but likely to bolster legal challenges in other cities and marks a rare Supreme Court setback for President Donald Trump.
- Legal questions over `regular forces` prompted an Oct. 29 order for more briefing, while related litigation continues in Los Angeles, California, Portland, Oregon, and the District of Columbia.
369 Articles
369 Articles
Supreme Court Just Checked Trump’s Playbook: A Crucial Win for the Rule of Law
The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday refused to rubber-stamp President Donald Trump’s bid to deploy federalized National Guard troops across Chicago — a move that was never about “law enforcement” and everything about authoritarian showboating. In a 6–3 decision, the Court upheld a lower-court injunction keeping the deployment blocked, reining in a president increasingly tempted to use the military for domestic political ends, Capitol News Illinois…
The U.S. government establishes the need for military operations in cities such as Chicago, Portland or Los Angeles with the protection of federal property and federal personnel.
Supreme Court Blocks Trump National Guard Deployment
The U.S. Supreme Court refused the Trump administration’s request to deploy National Guard troops to Chicago, marking a rare judicial setback for President Trump in his use of federal military authority. The Court’s action upholds lower court rulings that blocked the federal deployment and raises constitutional questions about presidential power under federal statute and the Posse Comitatus Act. The Supreme Court on Tuesday declined the Trump ad…
Washington. The U.S. Supreme Court yesterday rejected President Donald Trump’s government deploying National Guard elements in the Chicago area to expand its anti-immigrant campaign.
The administration of US President Donald Trump cannot, at any moment, send the National Guard to Chicago, Illinois. A request to do so has…
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