Supreme Court blocks Trump plan to deploy National Guard in Chicago

by · Star-Advertiser

REUTERS/JEENAH MOON/FILE PHOTO

National Guard members walk at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Broadview facility in Chicago, Ill., on Oct. 9. The U.S. Supreme Court refused today to let Donald Trump send National Guard troops to ​the Chicago area as the Republican ‌president expands the use of the military for domestic purposes in a growing number of Democratic-led jurisdictions, ‌a policy critics call an effort to punish adversaries and stifle dissent.

WASHINGTON >> The U.S. Supreme Court refused today to let Donald Trump send National Guard troops to ​the Chicago area as the Republican ‌president expands the use of the military for domestic purposes in a growing number of Democratic-led jurisdictions, ‌a policy critics call an effort to punish adversaries and stifle dissent.

The justices denied the Justice Department’s request to lift a judge’s order that has blocked the deployment of hundreds of National Guard personnel in a legal challenge brought by Illinois state officials and local leaders. The department had asked to allow the deployment while the litigation plays out.

The National Guard serves as state-based militia forces that answer to state governors except when called ‍into federal service by the president.

Trump ordered troops to Chicago, the third-largest U.S. city, and to Portland, Oregon, following his earlier deployments to Los Angeles, Memphis and Washington, D.C.

The case has been characterized by starkly different portrayals of the protests against Trump’s aggressive immigration enforcement in and around Chicago.

Trump and his allies have described Democratic-led cities as lawless, crime-ravaged and plagued with vast, violent protests. His administration has said troops are needed to protect ​federal property and personnel.

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Democratic mayors and governors, along with other Trump critics, have said these claims are a false ​account of the situation and a pretext for sending troops, accusing Trump of abusing his power.

Federal judges have expressed skepticism over the administration’s dire view of protests that local law enforcement officials have called limited in size, largely peaceful and manageable by their own forces – far from the “war zone” conditions described by Trump.

Trump has relied on a law that lets a president deploy state National Guard troops ‍to suppress a rebellion, repel an invasion or if he is “unable with the regular forces to execute the laws of the United States.”

Illinois and Chicago ​sued after the federal administration federalized 300 Illinois National Guard troops and also ordered Texas National Guard troops ⁠into the state, calling the actions unlawful. Officials have since announced the administration was sending home hundreds of National Guard troops who were dispatched to Portland from California, and to Chicago from Texas.

Chicago-based U.S. District Judge April Perry temporarily blocked the move on October 9, finding that the claims of violence during protests at an immigration facility in the Chicago suburb of Broadview, Illinois, where a ⁠small group of demonstrators had gathered daily for weeks, were unreliable.

Perry, an appointee of Democratic former President Joe Biden, found that there was no evidence of rebellion or that the law was not being enforced, faulting officials for “equating protests with riots and a lack of appreciation for the wide spectrum that exists between citizens who are observing, questioning and criticizing their government, and those who are obstructing, assaulting or doing violence.”

A National Guard deployment would “only add fuel to the fire,” Perry said.

A three-judge panel of the Chicago-based 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals declined to lift Perry’s order blocking the deployment, concluding that “the facts do not justify the president’s actions in Illinois.” Two of the three judges were appointed by Republican presidents, including one by Trump.

The Justice Department ⁠told the Supreme Court that the assessment by local officials of the protests was “implausibly rosy,” and that federal agents “have been forced to operate under the ‍constant threat of mob violence.”

Lawyers for Illinois and Chicago told the justices that the local protests have “never hindered the continued operation” of the Broadview facility, and that state and local authorities have responded to every request for assistance and contained any sporadic disruption.

Officials from Portland and Oregon are pursuing a separate legal challenge to ‍Trump’s planned deployment to that city. U.S. District Judge Karin Immergut, a Trump appointee, permanently blocked that deployment in a November ​7 ruling. The administration has appealed that ruling.

The Supreme Court in October asked the administration ‍, as well as Illinois and Chicago to provide written arguments over how to interpret the words “regular forces” in the law at issue in the case.

In an October 10 written ruling, Perry said that historical sources indicate that “regular forces” means only members regularly enlisted in the military, including the Army and Navy, as opposed to the National Guard.

Trump’s administration “made no attempt to rely on the regular forces before resorting to federalization of the National Guard,” Perry said, adding that there are other limits on the use of the military for domestic law enforcement purposes.

The administration repeatedly has sought the Supreme Court’s intervention to ​allow implementation of Trump policies impeded by lower courts. The Supreme Court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, has sided with the administration in almost every case that it has been called upon to review since Trump returned to the presidency in January.

See more:National newsPolitics

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