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Appeals panel hints it may allow Trump to control California National Guard deployment

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lailluminator.com – Jacob Fischler – 2025-06-18 05:00:00


A federal appeals court panel appears inclined to uphold President Trump’s authority to federalize California’s National Guard amid protests over immigration raids in Los Angeles. The court cited historic precedent granting presidents broad discretion in such matters, despite California’s argument that legal requirements were unmet. Justice Department lawyers claimed the president’s authority under Section 12406 is “unreviewable.” Protests erupted after ICE raids targeted undocumented immigrants, prompting Trump to deploy 4,000 Guard troops and 700 Marines over objections from Governor Gavin Newsom. Nineteen Democratic attorneys general backed California, arguing the federalization undermines state sovereignty and disrupts critical National Guard functions.

by Jacob Fischler, Louisiana Illuminator
June 18, 2025

A three-judge panel of a federal appeals court seemed poised Tuesday to allow President Donald Trump to command California National Guard troops during ongoing protests over immigration raids in Los Angeles.

The judges noted U.S. Supreme Court precedent gives the president wide discretion to determine when it is appropriate to federalize a state National Guard.

Sam Harbourt, an attorney for California’s state government, argued that the 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals should keep in place a lower court’s order that Trump relinquish control of 4,000 state National Guard troops. Trump’s order calling up the troops over Gov. Gavin Newsom’s objections undermined state sovereignty and kept the Guard from its core mission, he said.

The legal requirements for a president to take command of a state National Guard had not been met, making the order invalid, Harbourt argued.

But the 9th Circuit panel, composed of Trump appointees Judges Mark Bennett and Eric Miller and Judge Jennifer Sung, whom Democratic President Joe Biden appointed, noted the 1827 Supreme Court case Martin v. Mott dealt with similar issues. It decided the president alone could decide whether the circumstances allowing a president to take control of a state National Guard — including whether a foreign invasion was happening — were met.

“If we were writing on a blank slate, I would tend to agree with you,” Sung, the Biden appointee, told Harbourt. “But the problem that I see for you is that Mott seemed to be dealing with very similar phrasing about whenever there is an invasion, then the president has discretion, and it seemingly rejected the exact argument that you’re making.”

Miller said the state might be making good arguments, but they would be better made to the Supreme Court, as the circuit court was bound to follow the high court’s precedent.

“We’re supposed to follow the applicable case and leave it to them to overrule it,” he said of the Supreme Court justices.

Harbourt responded that earlier Supreme Court cases did not deal with the law at issue in this case, Section 12406 of U.S. Code Title X, that allows the president to call up National Guard troops if there is danger of an invasion, rebellion or if he is unable to enforce the laws with “regular forces.”

President’s power ‘unreviewable’

The judges also questioned U.S. Justice Department attorney Brett Shumate about the potential limits to Trump’s authority to declare that the conditions for calling up a state National Guard are met.

Shumate said the president’s decision-making in that sphere was unreviewable.

“Is it your view that if the president or future president simply invokes the statute, gives no reasons for doing it, provides no support for doing it, and there is nothing which would appear to a court to justify it, that the court still has no role at all in determining whether the present president (or) this hypothetical future president, correctly invoked (the law)?” Bennett asked.

It was, Shumate responded, “because if the statute is unreviewable, it’s unreviewable.”

“The statute here confers unreviewable discretion for the president,” he said.

Harbourt called that view an “extraordinary argument.”

The federal government’s position amounts to saying “the president can federalize National Guard forces as soon as he makes a judgment that civilian federal law enforcement officials cannot do the job as they’ve been doing it in ideal circumstances or face any obstacles,” Harbourt said. “At minimum, (the law) requires the president to make a showing that he’s at least contemplated alternative, more modest measures before calling in the National Guard.”

Shumate said the deployment remained necessary because of unrest in Los Angeles. Over days of protests, federal law enforcement officers have been subject to “mob violence” that local authorities have been unable to stop, he said.

Democratic states side with Newsom

A coalition of 19 Democratic attorneys general and the governor of Kansas filed a friend-of-the-court brief on Sunday supporting California’s argument that Trump’s National Guard deployment deprived states of their right to use Guard troops for their own purposes.

More than 430,000 state National Guard troops nationwide help state governments respond to natural disasters and other incidents, assist police in intercepting drugs and provide election support, the Democratic states wrote.

“Allowing an unlawful federalization of the National Guard pulls service members away from responding to emergencies and performing vital services for which they are specially trained, and which Amici States cannot replace,” they wrote.

They also noted that Trump’s order mobilizing the California Guard was not limited to the Golden State or the Los Angeles

The attorneys general of Washington, Delaware, Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Hawai’i, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Wisconsin filed the brief, along with Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly.

LA protests

Protests in the country’s second-largest city began June 6 after Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers raided workplaces. The raids were seen by protesters as an effort to detain migrants in the country illegally who had committed no other crimes.

Despite Newsom and Mayor Karen Bass’ objections, Trump called 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 U.S. Marines to the city to quell the protests and protect ICE officers. It was the first time in 60 years a president called a state’s National Guard over a governor’s objections and Newsom sued to stop it.

U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer ordered last week that Trump return command of the Guard to Newsom. The 9th Circuit panel paused that order before it went into effect, leaving Trump in command and the troops in Los Angeles.

A hearing in Breyer’s court is scheduled for Friday.

Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Louisiana Illuminator maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com.

The post Appeals panel hints it may allow Trump to control California National Guard deployment appeared first on lailluminator.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Right

This content presents a news report that largely focuses on a legal dispute involving former President Donald Trump’s federal authority over California’s National Guard during immigration-related protests. While it covers perspectives from both sides—the state government’s objections and the federal government’s legal reasoning—the framing and selection of details emphasize the legitimacy of presidential authority and includes statements from judges appointed by Trump, as well as a DOJ attorney defending the federal stance. The inclusion of supporting facts about protests and criticism from Democratic officials provides balance, but the overall tone and focus lean slightly toward supporting a strong executive power perspective, typical of Center-Right coverage. The article stops short of overt editorializing, maintaining journalistic neutrality while reflecting a slight leaning due to its focus on legal precedence favoring federal authority in this context.

News from the South - Louisiana News Feed

Saturday 10 PM Tropics Update: One far-off tropical wave to watch

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www.youtube.com – WWLTV – 2025-09-13 22:34:05

SUMMARY: A tropical wave near Africa is emerging over the Atlantic but remains disorganized. The National Hurricane Center gives it a 60% chance to develop into a depression or tropical storm, possibly becoming Gabrielle. This system may move northward, staying over the open Atlantic and away from the Gulf, posing no immediate threat. Since the last named storm in late August, stable air, dry conditions, and increased wind shear have suppressed tropical activity in the Atlantic. The next storm names are Gabrielle, Humberto, and Imelda, with only the current wave showing potential for development at this time.

Meteorologist Alexandra Cranford tracks a lone disturbance with a chance of development on Saturday night, September 13, 2025.

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News from the South - Louisiana News Feed

Haynes wanted in on Wildlife bribery scheme too, informant says

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thecurrentla.com – Leslie Turk – 2025-09-11 15:30:00

SUMMARY: Dusty Guidry, a former consultant who pleaded guilty to accepting $800,000 in bribes, testified that Assistant District Attorney Gary Haynes sought involvement in a bribery scheme at the Louisiana Department of Wildlife & Fisheries. Haynes, on trial for conspiracy, bribery, money laundering, and obstruction, was previously appointed to run Lafayette’s pretrial diversion program after supporting DA Don Landry. Guidry revealed Haynes pressured him to include him in a similar diversion program scheme at Wildlife & Fisheries, receiving checks totaling $90,000. The scheme involved splitting bribes among Guidry, vendor Leonard Franques, and former department secretary Jack Montoucet, who has also been charged. The statewide program never launched.

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The post Haynes wanted in on Wildlife bribery scheme too, informant says appeared first on thecurrentla.com

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News from the South - Louisiana News Feed

OPPJ Comprehensive Plan

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www.youtube.com – KTVE – 2025-09-10 21:15:08

SUMMARY: The Ouachita Parish Police Jury is conducting a series of community meetings to gather public input for their comprehensive plan guiding future growth. Police Jury members, including Larry Bratton from District D, emphasize the importance of reflecting residents’ voices in the master plan. Community members participated in interactive stations, allocating resources to priorities like infrastructure and downtown development, to help shape goals for the next 2, 5, and 20 years. Landscape architect Matt Pizatella and partners from Atlas support the effort. Bratton stresses that without proactive planning, the parish risks costly and less beneficial outcomes in the long term.

OPPJ Comprehensive Plan

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