CHICAGO — Today, Governor J.B. Pritzker announced that “in the coming hours” the Trump administration intends to federalize 300 members of the Illinois National Guard over his objections.
For months, President Trump and his senior-most officials have been threatening to send troops into Chicago using the pretext of protecting ICE facilities and operations. He has repeatedly stated his desire for the Governor of Illinois and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson to request his help to “clean up” the city. And just last week, President Trump gave an unprecedented partisan address to the nation’s top military leaders in which he urged using Chicago and other cities as “training grounds.”
“This is the latest escalation of attacks on people in the Chicago area,” said Colleen K. Connell, executive director of the ACLU of Illinois. “From federal officers’ attack on Black and Brown residents — including children — living in an apartment building on the City’s South Side, to the indiscriminate firing of pepper balls and projectiles in our neighborhoods and against protesters, Trump is targeting Chicago. The president clearly despises the reality that Chicago rejects his cruel policies, but we will not be intimidated.”
This mobilization would be the latest attempt by the Trump administration to scare the millions of people living in American cities. Since June, he has sent armed federal agents and military troops to Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., Memphis, and Portland. He has also threatened to do the same in New York City, Baltimore, and San Francisco.
“Yet again President Trump is escalating tensions with a National Guard deployment, just as he has in other American cities,” said Hina Shamsi, director of the ACLU’s National Security Project. “We see the president’s strategy for what it is — placing National Guard troops in legal and ethical jeopardy in an attempt to create conflict, sow fear in our communities, and intimidate people from exercising their constitutional rights. But we can’t let this president normalize military and armed federal policing in our country and must remember that no matter what uniform they wear, federal agents and troops are bound by the Constitution and must be held accountable if they violate our rights.”
If President Trump federalizes troops under Title 10, they are likely to be activated under 10 USC § 12406, which the President also invoked in California and Oregon. Troops activated in this status are prohibited under the centuries-old Posse Comitatus Act from “direct enforcement of the law.” A federal judge in California recently found that Defense Department orders given to California National Guard troops forcibly deployed under this provision in support of immigration enforcement and other operations caused them to violate that law. Federal agents and troops are generally not trained in local policing or de-escalation. Yesterday, a federal judge in Oregon heard arguments in the state and City of Portland’s challenge to the President’s activation of 200 members of the Oregon National Guard over the governor’s objections.