Federal judge orders halt to National Guard deployment in DC
A federal judge in the District of Columbia ordered the Trump administration to end its deployment of the National Guard in the nation’s capital.
Judge Jia Cobb said the administration’s deployment of National Guard violates the Constitution. She also said the military force illegally overrides the local leaders authority to oversee law enforcement.
“The District may not be a sovereign like a state is, but it can nevertheless exercise delegated sovereign powers and is therefore injured by being unlawfully deprived of those powers,” Cobb wrote in a court order.
On Aug. 11, President Trump ordered the National Guard to be deployed in order to deter crime in the District of Columbia. National guard units from South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Louisiana, Mississippi, Ohio, West Virginia, Georgia and Alabama joined efforts to deter crime in the capital.
“The Court concludes that Plaintiff is suffering an irreparable harm to its sovereign powers under the Home Rule Act, which are being usurped by Defendants’ unlawful actions,” Cobb wrote.
The Home Rule Act allows local government officials to maintain control over law enforcement in order to deter crime and protect public safety.
On Oct. 31, Trump extended the order keeping the National Guard in the district until Feb. 28, 2026.
Cobb gave the Trump administration until Dec. 11 to appeal the ruling.
Latest News Stories
Bipartisan lawmakers reintroduce DACA protections
Routh guilty on all charges in plot to kill Trump
Trump, Zelenskyy meet as Russia accused of violating NATO nations’ air space
WATCH: IL governor on photo with wanted suspect: ‘No way to vet everybody’
Illinois quick hits: Constitutional amendment would guarantee parental rights
Oversight committee expands probe on ‘politically motivated’ debanking
‘Brutal slog:’ Government shutdown looms as bipartisan negotiations derail
WATCH: Republican leader: says Pritzker budget cut EO a ploy for IL tax increases
Nebraska attorney general sues Lorex over Chinese surveillance concerns
Colorado pushes ahead on clean energy as EV funding returns
Trump lectures UN, Western Europe for policy failures
Arizonans vote on successor to U.S. Rep. Raúl Grijalva