Trump Highlights Favorable Ruling on the National Guard in Oregon as the Supreme Court Considers Its Deployment in Chicago.
- The Supreme Court will decide on the Trump administration's proposal to deploy the National Guard in Chicago, which could affect similar actions nationwide.
- U.S. Solicitor General John Sauer argues that lower court rulings undermine the President's authority as Commander-in-Chief.
- Illinois officials contend that local law enforcement can handle protests without federal intervention, emphasizing their sovereignty.
- Conflicts in federal and state authority regarding National Guard use are highlighted by a divided 9th Circuit Court that supported the deployment in Oregon.
15 Articles
15 Articles
Letters to the Editor: Ruling allowing troop deployment in Oregon echoes previous legal ‘tragedies’
'As the dissenting opinion points out, the uncontroverted evidence established absence of any threat to the laws or government of the United States in Portland sufficient to justify the deployment of federal troops,' writes an L.A. Times reader.
While a federal judge said she will issue an order blocking the deployment of National Guard troops in Chicago, U.S. President Donald Trump said he feels empowered to send elements to any city that...
CNN As a federal judge said she will extend an order blocking the deployment of National Guard troops to Chicago, President Donald Trump said he feels empowered to send troops to any city he deems necessary, after an appeals court this week upheld their deployment to Portland, Oregon.
Trump's deployments of National Guard troops reignite a 200-year-old Constitutional debate
The conflicts over President Donald Trump’s deployment of National Guard troops to Illinois and Oregon hinge on a question as old as the Constitution itself: Where does federal power end and state authority begin?
By Juan Fritze, CNN President Donald Trump is leaning on a new appeals court ruling that upheld his deployment of the National Guard in Portland, Oregon, while urging the Supreme Court to allow his administration to carry out a similar effort in Chicago. Describing those protesting the administration in Chicago as “rioters” leading a “violent resistance,” the Trump administration told the justices Tuesday that its decision to deploy the National…
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