
Trump's National Guard deployment illegal, court rules
Trump's National Guard deployment illegal, court rules
A judge said Donald Trump must return control of the California National Guard to the state. Photo: Reuters
A judge has ordered Donald Trump to return control of the California National Guard to the state, saying the president's decision to deploy them to protest-hit Los Angeles over Governor Gavin Newsom's objections was "illegal."
"His actions were illegal... He must therefore return control of the California National Guard to the Governor of the State of California forthwith," US District Judge Charles Breyer wrote of the president in the ruling, seen by AFP.
However, he paused the order until 12pm local time on Friday – and the White House almost immediately launched an appeal that could make it all the way to the Supreme Court.
"Donald Trump will be relieved of his command at noon tomorrow," Newsom said in televised comments after the ruling was issued.
"He is not a monarch, he is not a king, and he should stop acting like one," the 57-year-old Democrat said.
Trump's decision to federalise the National Guard – a reserve force – and deploy them in California over the objection of the state governor was one not taken by a US president since 1965.
The Republican has argued he did so because protests in Los Angeles against immigration raids ordered by his administration had gotten out of control, and the city was "burning."
But Newsom and local law enforcement have stated repeatedly that there was no need for the deployment, and the protests have been mostly peaceful and contained to a few city blocks – albeit tarnished by some spectacular violence, including the torching of several cars.
Critics have accused Trump – who also deployed 700 active Marines to the sprawling city – of exaggerating the crisis and exceeding his authority to conduct a power grab.
Breyer's 36-page opinion said the violence fell "far short" of the "rebellion" Trump described to justify calling in the guardsmen.
There was "no evidence of organised, as apart from sporadic or impromptu, violence" during the protests, which first broke out in Los Angeles on Friday, he said.
"Nor is there evidence that any of the violent protesters were attempting to overthrow the government as a whole; the evidence is overwhelming that protesters gathered to protest a single issue – the immigration raids."
Breyer also wrote that he was "troubled" by the implication that "protest against the federal government, a core civil liberty protected by the First Amendment, can justify a finding of rebellion." (AFP)
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