Supreme Court is set to rule on Trump using troops in U.S. cities
WASHINGTONย โย The Supreme Court is set to rule for the first time on whether the president has the power to deploy troops in American cities over the objections of local and state officials.
A decision could come at any time.
And even a one-line order siding with President Trump would send the message that he is free to use the military to carry out his orders โ and in particular, in Democratic-controlled cities and states.
Trump administration lawyers filed an emergency appeal last week asking the court to reverse judges in Chicago who blocked the deployment of the National Guard there.
The Chicago-based judges said Trump exaggerated the threat faced by federal immigration agents and had equated โprotests with riots.โ
Trump administration lawyers, however, said these judges had no authority to second-guess the president. The power to deploy the National Guard โis committed to his exclusive discretion by law,โ they asserted in their appeal in Trump vs. Illinois.
That broad claim of executive power might win favor with the courtโs conservatives.
Administration lawyers told the court that the National Guard would โdefend federal personnel, property, and functions in the face of ongoing violenceโ in response to aggressive immigration enforcement, but it would not carry out ordinary policing.
Yet Trump has repeatedly threatened to send U.S. troops to San Francisco and other Democratic-led cities to carry out ordinary law enforcement.
When he sent 4,000 Guard members and 700 Marines to Los Angeles in June, their mission was to protect federal buildings from protesters. But state officials said troops went beyond that and were used to carry out a show in force in MacArthur Park in July.
Newsom, Bonta warn of dangers
Thatโs why legal experts and Democratic officials are sounding an alarm.
โTrump v. Illinois is a make-or-break moment for this court,โ said Georgetown law professor Steve Vladeck, a frequent critic of the courtโs pro-Trump emergency orders. โFor the Supreme Court to issue a ruling that allows the president to send troops into our cities based upon contrived (or even government-provoked) facts … would be a terrible precedent for the court to set not just for what it would allow President Trump to do now but for even more grossly tyrannical conduct.โ
California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta and Gov. Gavin Newsom filed a brief in the Chicago case warning of the danger ahead.
โOn June 7, for the first time in our nationโs history, the President invoked [the Militia Act of 1903] to federalize a Stateโs National Guard over the objections of the Stateโs Governor. Since that time, it has become clear that the federal governmentโs actions in Southern California earlier this summer were just the opening salvo in an effort to transform the role of the military in American society,โ their brief said.
โAt no prior point in our history has the President used the military this way: as his own personal police force, to be deployed for whatever law enforcement missions he deems appropriate. … What the federal government seeks is a standing army, drawn from state militias, deployed at the direction of the President on a nationwide basis, for civilian law enforcement purposes, for an indefinite period of time.โ
Conservatives cite civil rights examples
Conservatives counter that Trump is seeking to enforce federal law in the face of strong resistance and non-cooperation at times from local officials.
โPortland and Chicago have seen violent protests outside of federal buildings, attacks on ICE and DHS agents, and organized efforts to block the enforcement of immigration law,โ said UC Berkeley law professor John Yoo. โAlthough local officials have raised cries of a federal โoccupationโ and โdictatorship,โ the Constitution places on the president the duty to โtake care that the laws are faithfully executed.โโ
He noted that presidents in the past โused these same authorities to desegregate southern schools in the 1950s after Brown v. Board of Education and to protect civil rights protesters in the 1960s. Those who cheer those interventions cannot now deny the same constitutional authority when it is exercised by a president they oppose,โ he said.
The legal battle so far has sidestepped Trumpโs broadest claims of unchecked power, but focused instead on whether he is acting in line with the laws adopted by Congress.
The Constitution gives Congress the power โto provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the laws of the Union, suppress insurrections and repel Invasions.โ
Beginning in 1903, Congress said that โthe President may call into Federal service members and units of the National Guard of any State in such numbers as he considers necessaryโ if he faces โdanger of invasion by a foreign nation … danger of a rebellion against the authority of the government of the United States or the president is unable to execute the laws of the United States.โ
While Trump administration lawyers claim he faces a โrebellion,โ the legal dispute has focused on whether he is โunable to execute the laws.โ
Lower courts have blocked deployments
Federal district judges in Portland and Chicago blocked Trumpโs deployments after ruling that protesters had not prevented U.S. immigration agents from doing their jobs.
Judge Karin Immergut, a Trump appointee, described the administrationโs description of โwar-ravagedโ Portland as โuntethered to the facts.โ
In Chicago, Judge April Perry, a Biden appointee, said that โpolitical opposition is not rebellion.โ
But the two appeals courts โ the 9th Circuit in San Francisco and the 7th Circuit in Chicago โ handed down opposite decisions.
A panel of the 9th Circuit said judges must defer to the presidentโs assessment of the danger faced by immigration agents. Applying that standard, the appeals court by a 2-1 vote said the National Guard deployment in Portland may proceed.
But a panel of the 7th Circuit in Chicago agreed with Perry.
โThe facts do not justify the Presidentโs actions in Illinois, even giving substantial deference to his assertions,โ they said in a 3-0 ruling last week. โFederal facilities, including the processing facility in Broadview, have remained open despite regular demonstrations against the administrationโs immigration policies. And though federal officers have encountered sporadic disruptions, they have been quickly contained by local, state, and federal authorities.โ
Attorneys for Illinois and Chicago agreed and urged the court to turn down Trumpโs appeal.
โThere is no basis for claiming the President is โunableโ to โexecuteโ federal law in Illinois,โ they said. โFederal facilities in Illinois remain open, the individuals who have violated the law by attacking federal authorities have been arrested, and enforcement of immigration law in Illinois has only increased in recent weeks.โ
U.S. Solicitor Gen. D. John Sauer, shown at his confirmation hearing in February, said the federal judges in Chicago had no legal or factual basis to block the Trump administrationโs deployment of troops.
(Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images)
Trumpโs Solicitor Gen. D. John Sauer presented a dramatically different account in his appeal.
โOn October 4, the President determined that the situation in Chicago had become unsustainably dangerous for federal agents, who now risk their lives to carry out basic law enforcement functions,โ he wrote. โThe President deployed the federalized Guardsmen to Illinois to protect federal officers and federal property.โ
He disputed the idea that agents faced just peaceful protests.
โOn multiple occasions, federal officers have also been hit and punched by protestors at the Broadview facility. The physical altercations became more significant and the clashes more violent as the size of the crowds swelled throughout September,โ Sauer wrote. โRioters have targeted federal officers with fireworks and have thrown bottles, rocks, and tear gas at them. More than 30 [DHS] officers have been injured during the assaults on federal law enforcement at the Broadview facility alone, resulting in multiple hospitalizations.โ
He said the judges in Chicago had no legal or factual basis to block the deployment, and he urged the court to cast aside their rulings.