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Illinois sues to block Trump from deploying national guard troops to Chicago – live | Trump administration

Illinois sues to block Trump from deploying national guard troops to Chicago

Illinois has filed a lawsuit this morning seeking to block Donald Trump from deploying hundreds of federalized national guard troops into the streets of Chicago.

The Democratic-led state filed the lawsuit hours after a federal judge in Oregon yesterday temporarily blocked
the Trump administration from sending any national guard troops to police Portland.

The lawsuit took aim at a decision by the Trump administration over the weekend to federalize up to 300 members of the Illinois national guard over the objections of Democratic governor JB Pritzker and another 400 from Texas to deploy into Chicago.

“These advances in President Trump’s long-declared ‘War’ on Chicago and Illinois are unlawful and dangerous,” the complaint alleged.

The White House did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

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US supreme court begins new term with nation’s democratic governance at stake

Robert Tait

Robert Tait

Context may be everything in the precedent-shattering era of the current US supreme court.

For several years – since conservatives, gained a six-three majority on the bench thanks to Donald Trump’s nominations during his first presidency – the court has been delivering transformative rulings that have reverberated across the social and political landscape.

In 2022, it overturned Roe v Wade, ending the constitutional right to abortion that had existed for nearly half-a-century.

In July 2024, in a far-reaching decision, it granted Trump – and, by extension, other US presidents – sweeping immunity from prosecution for all acts, including potential crimes, committed in the course of his official duties.

Scrutiny of the nine supreme court justices is about to reach a new level of intensity amidst Trump’s increasingly unfettered forays into authoritarianism. Illustration: Alex Wong/Getty Images/Guardian Design

This year, following his return to the White House, the court has sided with Trump roughly 20 times after administration officials sought relief from lower court rulings that pushed back on his assertion of expansive executive power to implement his agenda.

Now scrutiny on the nine justices is about to reach a new level of intensity as the court begins what is expected to be an unusually fraught term today, amidst the president’s increasingly unfettered forays into authoritarianism.

With the president pushing to prosecute his political enemies, threatening a crackdown on the left on the putative grounds of combating violent extremism, and preparing to deploy military force in Democrat-run cities, the court is due to hear and issue rulings on a slew of ideologically-charged cases.

The survival of the landmark 1965 Voting Rights Act, the legality of transgender surgery, the rights of states to count mail-in ballots at elections, and Trump’s powers to impose his sweeping tariff policy could all be up for grabs in the coming weeks and months.

At stake, some seasoned legal experts say, is the very future of democratic governance in the US.

You can read the rest of Robert’s piece here:

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