The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit will determine Tuesday whether President Trump overstepped constitutional boundaries by deploying 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 Marines to Los Angeles without California Governor Gavin Newsom’s consent.
This pivotal hearing comes after U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer’s Thursday ruling that the deployment violated the Posse Comitatus Act and the Insurrection Act, which govern military use in domestic affairs.
Constitutional Clash Over States’ Rights
At the heart of the case lies an unprecedented constitutional showdown between federal and state authority. California’s lawsuit, filed June 9, contends Trump’s mobilization of combat-ready Marines and National Guard personnel to monitor immigration protests constitutes unlawful military policing.
The administration has countered that protecting federal buildings and ICE facilities from what it calls “coordinated attacks” justifies the extraordinary measures under the president’s Article II powers.
The three-judge appellate panel hearing the case features two Trump appointees and one Biden nominee, raising stakes for a decision that could influence 2024 campaign narratives about executive power.
Legal onservers have noted the unusual speed of the appeal process, with the Ninth Circuit granting an emergency stay just hours after Breyer’s original injunction ordered troops to stand down.
This controversy has reignited First Amendment concerns after Judge Breyer warned against classifying protests as rebellions. “Peaceful dissent against federal policies cannot justify military occupation of American cities,” the ruling stated, referencing footage showing Marines establishing checkpoints in predominantly Latino neighborhoods.
Meanwhile, Homeland Security officials are maintaining the deployment prevented $200 million in property damage during the June unrest.
As the rest of the country awaits the decision, parallel unrest is still ongoing elsewhere, including the Minnesota lawmaker assassination and nationwide “No Kings” protests coinciding with Trump’s birthday.