SCOTUS to decide if president can override states, send troops to cities
The U.S. Supreme Court is about to weigh in on one of the most significant federal authority questions in modern times.
Justices are now deliberating whether a president can send the National Guard into U.S. cities without the approval of state and local leaders, following a Trump administration request to overturn a blockade on troop deployments in Chicago, as the Los Angeles Times reports.
The case, Trump v. Illinois, marks the first time the nation’s highest court will rule on a president’s unilateral authority to deploy federally controlled forces inside the U.S. over local objections.
Trump cites national security concerns
After citing escalating violence against federal agents and property, President Trump invoked the Militia Act of 1903 on June 7 to take control of a state’s National Guard -- marking the first such use in U.S. history without governor's consent.
Administration attorneys argue the move is lawful and necessary, with Solicitor General D. John Sauer asserting that over 30 DHS officers were injured in violent clashes around Chicago's Broadview federal facility by early October. “On October 4, the President determined that the situation in Chicago had become unsustainably dangerous for federal agents,” wrote Sauer in the government’s emergency petition to the high court.
Lower courts divided on presidential authority
Two federal appeals courts issued starkly opposite rulings, a situation that has now forced the Supreme Court to step in as the final arbiter.
The Ninth Circuit, based in San Francisco, sided with the administration in a 2-1 ruling allowing troops in Portland, saying judges must defer to the president’s national security assessments. Conversely, the Seventh Circuit out of Chicago disagreed unanimously, stating, “The facts do not justify the President’s actions in Illinois, even giving substantial deference to his assertions.”
Local officials push back
Illinois officials argue that Trump misrepresented the scale of unrest and blurred the line between civil protests and organized rebellion. Judge April Perry emphasized that “political opposition is not rebellion,” countering the Trump administration’s narrative of supposed lawlessness in Chicago.
In their brief defending the trial-level restraint on federal troops, Chicago and Illinois attorneys noted that local and federal authorities had, in fact, kept order and maintained federal operations throughout the demonstrations.
California sounds alarm
California officials also took the unusual step of filing a legal brief against the administration, backing Illinois and warning of dangerous precedents.
In a joint statement, California Attorney General Rob Bonta and Gov. Gavin Newsom wrote that the events in Southern California earlier this summer were “just the opening salvo in an effort to transform the role of the military in American society.”
They added, “At no prior point in our history has the President used the military this way: as his own personal police force... deployed at the direction of the President... for an indefinite period of time.”
Academic, legal experts weigh in
Not all legal minds see this as a power grab -- some view the deployment as part of the executive’s constitutional duties.
U.C. Berkeley law professor John Yoo argued that presidents are obligated to enforce the law, stating, “Although local officials have raised cries of a federal ‘occupation’... the Constitution places on the president the duty to ‘take care that the laws are faithfully executed.’”
Yoo also reminded critics that presidents Eisenhower and Kennedy used federal forces in the 1950s and 60s to uphold civil rights, asserting, “Those who cheer those interventions cannot now deny the same constitutional authority when it is exercised by a president they oppose.”
A precedent with lasting impact
Still, the implications of Trump v. Illinois could stretch far beyond today's headlines and into the bedrock of American federalism.
As Georgetown law professor Steve Vladeck warned, “For the Supreme Court to issue a ruling that allows the president to send troops into our cities based upon contrived... facts would be a terrible precedent.”
His concern: if presidents can deploy forces without genuine emergency and over state resistance, it risks creating a standing, domestic military under presidential control for civilian law enforcement -- something the founders explicitly sought to avoid.
What comes next?
The question now before the Court is not simply whether Trump overreached, but whether future presidents -- of any party -- can override governors and deploy military muscle in moments of perceived unrest.
No timeline has been announced, but with lower courts split and tensions still high in Chicago and Portland, legal and political observers expect a ruling in the near term. Whatever the decision, it will either reinforce states’ abilities to police their own streets or crown the presidency with a new level of domestic control not seen in modern times.





