Trump says Chicago mayor, Illinois governor should be jailed
WASHINGTONΒ βΒ Chicago is emerging as the latest testing ground for President Trumpβs domestic deployment of military force as hundreds of National Guard troops were expected to descend on the city.
The president said Wednesday that Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson should be jailed for failing to support federal agents, and continued to paint a dark and violent picture of both Chicago and Portland, Ore., where Trump is trying to send federal troops but has so far been stonewalled by the courts.
βItβs so bad,β Trump said at the White House on Wednesday. βItβs so crazy. Itβs like the movies … where you have these bombed-out cities and these bombed-out people. Itβs worse than that. I donβt think they can make a movie as bad.β
Pritzker this week characterized Trumpβs depiction of Chicago as βderangedβ and untrue. Federal agents are making the community βless safe,β the governor said, noting that residents do not want βDonald Trump to occupy their communitiesβ and that people of color are fearful of being profiled during immigration crackdowns.
Trump has taken issue with Democrats in Illinois and Oregon who are fighting his efforts, and has twice said this week that he is willing to use the Insurrection Act of 1807 if local leaders and the courts try to stop him. White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller also contended this week that a court ruling blocking Trumpβs deployments to Portland amounted to a βlegal insurrectionβ as well as βan insurrection against the laws and Constitution of the United States.β
In a televised interview Monday, Miller was asked about his remarks and asked whether the administration would abide by court rulings that stop the deployment of troops to Illinois and Portland. Miller responded by saying the president has βplenary authorityβ before going silent midsentence β a moment that the host said may have been a technical issue.
βPlenary authorityβ is a legal term that indicates someone has limitless power.
The legality of deployments to Portland and Chicago will face scrutiny in two federal courts Thursday.
The U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals will hear an appeal by the Trump administration in the Portland matter. A Trump-appointed judge, Karin Immergut, found the White House had not only violated the law in activating the Oregon National Guard, but it also had further defied the law by attempting to circumvent her order, sending the California National Guard in its place.
That three-judge appellate panel consists of two Trump appointees and one Clinton appointee.
Meanwhile, in Illinois, U.S. District Judge April Perry declined Monday to block the deployment of National Guard members on an emergency basis, allowing a buildup of forces to proceed. She will hear arguments Thursday on the legality of the operation.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom, one of Trumpβs top political foes, has joined the fight against the presidentβs deployment efforts.
The Trump administration sent 14 members of Californiaβs National Guard to Illinois to train troops from other states, according to court records filed Tuesday. Federal officials have also told California they intend to extend Trumpβs federalization of 300 members of the stateβs Guard through next year.
βTrump is going on a cross-country crusade to sow chaos and division,β Newsom said Wednesday. βHis actions β and those of his Cabinet β are against our deeply held American values. He needs to stop this illegal charade now.β
By Wednesday evening, there were few signs of National Guard troops on the streets of Chicago. But troops from other states, including Texasβ National Guard, were waiting on the sidelines at an Army Reserve Center in Illinois as early as Tuesday.
In anticipation of the deployment, Pritzker warned that if the presidentβs efforts went unchecked, it would put the United States on a βthe path to full-blown authoritarianism.β
The Democratic governor also said the presidentβs calls to jail him were βunhingedβ and said Trump was a βwannabe dictator.β
βThere is one thing I really want to say to Donald Trump: If you come for my people, you come through me. So come and get me,β Pritzker said in an interview with MSNBC.
As tensions grew in Chicago, Trump hosted an event at the White House to address how he intends to crack down on antifa, a nebulous left-wing anti-facist movement that he recently designated as a domestic terrorist organization.
At the event, the president said many of the people involved in the movement are active in Chicago and Portland β and he once again attacked the local and state leaders in both cities and states.
βYou can say of Portland and you can say certainly of Chicago, it is not lawful what they are doing,β Trump said about the left-wing protests. βThey are going to have to be very careful.β
Johnson, the mayor of Chicago, slammed Trump for saying he should be jailed for his actions.
βThis is not the first time Trump has tried to have a Black man unjustly arrested,β Johnson posted on social media. βIβm not going anywhere.β
Pritzker continued to attack Trumpβs efforts into the evening, accusing the president of βbreaching the Constitution and breaking the law.β
βWe need to stand up together and speak up,β the governor said on social media.
Times staff writer Melody Gutierrez in Sacramento contributed to this report.