The 9th Circuit Rejects Trump's Audacious Claim That He Can Use the National Guard However He Likes
Although the appeals court said the president probably complied with the law he invoked to justify his California deployment, it emphasized that such decisions are subject to judicial review.

Last week, a federal judge in San Francisco issued a temporary restraining order against President Donald Trump's unilateral deployment of the California National Guard, saying that decision was illegal and unconstitutional. That same day, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit imposed an administrative stay on U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer's order, and on Thursday the court decided the stay should continue while the case is pending.
That ruling represents both a victory and a defeat for the Trump administration. The three-judge panel unanimously concluded that the president probably complied with the statute he cited to justify the deployment. But it also unanimously rejected Trump's bold argument that it had no business addressing that issue because his decision was "unreviewable."
On June 7, in response to protests against immigration raids in Los Angeles, Trump instructed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to deploy 2,000 National Guard members, describing their mission as protecting federal personnel and facilities from "violence and disorder." California's Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom immediately objected to that deployment, which was later increased to 4,000 troops, describing it as unnecessary, inflammatory, and illegal. Two days later, Newsom filed the federal lawsuit that resulted in Breyer's order.
In his memo to Hegseth, Trump invoked his authority under 10 USC 12406. That law authorizes the president to "call into Federal service members and units of the National Guard of any State" in three circumstances: 1) when the United States "is invaded or is in danger of invasion by a foreign nation," 2) when "there is a rebellion or danger of a rebellion against the authority of the Government of the United States," or 3) when "the President is unable with the regular forces to execute the laws of the United States."
In response to Newsom's lawsuit, the government asserted both of the latter two conditions. Breyer concluded that neither condition had been met. But according to the 9th Circuit, Breyer failed to give Trump the deference that Supreme Court precedent suggests he deserves under Section 12406.
"We disagree with Defendants' primary argument that the President's decision to federalize members of the California National Guard under [Section 12406] is completely insulated from judicial review," the appeals court said in its unsigned order. "Nonetheless, we are persuaded that, under longstanding precedent interpreting the statutory predecessor to [Section 12406], our review of that decision must be highly deferential."
That "statutory predecessor" was the Militia Act of 1795, which the Supreme Court applied in the 1827 case Martin v. Mott. The 1795 law authorized the president to call up the militia "whenever the United States shall be invaded, or be in imminent danger of invasion," and the case involved a New York militia member who flouted a mobilization order during the War of 1812. The Court unanimously agreed that "the authority to decide whether the exigency has arisen belongs exclusively to the President" and that "his decision is conclusive upon all other persons."
As Samuel Harbourt, California's supervising deputy solicitor general, noted during a 9th Circuit hearing on Tuesday, Martin involved two issues that are not implicated by Trump's National Guard deployment: "sensitive considerations involving foreign policy" and the military chain of command. But as the 9th Circuit saw it, subsequent decisions suggest those factors were not crucial.
"If we were considering the text of [Section 12406] alone, we might conclude that the President's determination is subject to review like certain other factual findings that are preconditions for executive action under a statute," the appeals court said. "But we are not writing on a blank slate. The history of Congress's statutory delegations of its calling forth power, and a line of cases beginning with [Martin] interpreting those delegations, strongly suggest that our review of the President's determinations in this context is especially deferential."
California "emphasizes that Martin is nearly 200 years old, and that it is in some tension with more recent decisions about the reviewability of executive determinations—even determinations about questions such as the existence of an invasion," the 9th Circuit noted. "But Martin's continuing viability is not for us to decide. The Supreme Court has admonished that '[i]f a precedent of this Court has direct application in a case, yet appears to rest on reasons rejected in some other line of decisions, the Court of Appeals should follow the case which directly controls, leaving to this Court the prerogative of overruling its own decisions.'"
In light of Martin, the 9th Circuit said, the court "must give deference to the President's factual assertions" regarding the impact of the L.A. protests on federal law enforcement. In concluding those allegations probably suffice under Section 12406, the 9th Circuit emphasized that the law "does not have as a prerequisite that the President be completely precluded from executing the relevant laws of the United States in order to call members of the National Guard into federal service." Nor does it "suggest that activation is inappropriate so long as any continued execution of the laws is feasible."
The 9th Circuit did not address Trump's contention that the L.A. protests constituted a "rebellion," which Breyer also rejected. For the purpose of deciding whether to issue a stay pending appeal, the court said, it was enough to conclude that, given the "highly deferential standard of review" applied in Martin, Trump was likely to prevail in his claim that he was "unable" to enforce federal laws "with the regular forces."
At the same time, the 9th Circuit unambiguously rejected the government's claim that Trump's compliance with Section 12406 is a "political question" beyond the purview of federal courts. "Because the political question doctrine is grounded in the constitutional separation of powers, it has traditionally been limited to constitutional cases," the court noted. "It has not been available in statutory cases. Applying it in statutory cases would 'systematically favor' the President over Congress by ignoring the limitations that the latter placed on the former's authority, threatening the very separation of powers that the doctrine is meant to protect." And since this case involves statutory interpretation, the 9th Circuit said, the political question doctrine does not apply.
The appeals court also emphasized that the deference required by Martin has limits. "Martin does not compel us to accept the federal government's position that the President could federalize the National Guard based on no evidence whatsoever, and that courts would be unable to review a decision that was obviously absurd or made in bad faith," it said.
The 9th Circuit added that "we do not think that any minimal interference with the execution of laws is, by itself, enough to justify invoking" the third prong of Section 12406. "The statutory context confirms that," it said. "Subsections one and two of the statute discuss unusual and extreme exigencies—invasions and rebellions—that threaten the normal operations of civil government. If we were to adopt the federal government's reading of subsection three, it would swallow subsections one and two, because any invasion or rebellion renders the President unable to exercise some federal laws."
The issue of whether Trump complied with the terms of the specific statute he chose to invoke might seem unimportant in light of the much broader powers granted by the Insurrection Act, which he so far has not invoked. But this case raises crucial questions regarding the rule of law, the separation of powers, judicial review, and federalism.
As the 9th Circuit noted, the Constitution gives Congress the primary authority to call up the militia, and the president is not free to ignore the conditions that Congress attaches to any delegation of that authority. If the president does that, the court emphasized, it is clearly the judicial branch's job to say so, contrary to the Trump administration's assertion that the remedy for a president's abuse of his statutory authority in this area is exclusively "political," meaning Congress cannot rely on the courts to enforce its will. And without judicial review to ensure the president is following the law, the National Guard, today's version of the state militia, would become nothing more than a federal appendage that the president can use at will, impinging on the powers reserved to the states under the 10th Amendment.
Although those issues have no particular partisan valence, the president's supporters have reflexively sided with him in this dispute, arguing that his role as commander in chief of the armed forces precludes judicial intervention. But that position ignores the checks and balances established by the Constitution, which assigns different functions to different branches and divides power between the states and the federal government.
Imagine how Republicans would have reacted if President Joe Biden had unilaterally deployed National Guard members during the COVID-19 pandemic, arguing that they were needed to enforce lockdowns, vaccine or mask mandates, or the federal eviction moratorium in the face of occasionally violent opposition to those policies. The Trump supporters who today argue that the president should have complete discretion to deploy the National Guard as he sees fit surely would have sung a different tune in response to a Democratic president's heavy-handed use of that power.
In that situation, Republicans would ask what specific legal authority the president was invoking and insist that he meet its requirements. Such demands would be perfectly reasonable, and so would the expectation that the courts would make sure the president was complying with the law. That vital function is not contingent on the president's political affiliation.
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Courts are free to believe what they wish. They have zero say here. He was being courteous pretending to care about their belief.
Even objectively, it's really a sad attempt on Sullum's part.
You can't just do anything you like... you have to let us review it after the fact!
Yeah. What were those Founders thinking when they drew up separation of powers and checks and balances? Those things are so antiquated and quaint. What we really need is a strongman who answers to no one and rules by decree.
Poor sarc. Lost another one.
Poor Strawcasmic.
"Although the appeals court said the president probably complied with the law he invoked to justify his California deployment"
So sorry that this is happening to you, Sarckles.
Sarc didnt actually read the ruling saying Trump was right. Until maddow admits it, sarc will hold on strong.
From the guy who thinks article 2 has no powers and must defer to congress and activist judges.
Youre so fucking dumb sarc.
Audacious!
So in a brutal repudiation of Trump, the 9th says he did it right?
Does anyone know of a web site for libertarians?
Can we change this site description from "libertarian" to "Koch suckers"?
Obviously, it’s cum to that.
Hope the name change doesn't shaft the libertarians in the comments.
You'll just feel a little prick.
Not to worry. There are precious few Libertarians in the comments here.
Thanks for ruining the thread.
Leftists can't meme.
Wonderful cognitive dissonance at the beginning of the article.
Also, I am sure federal workers being attacked doing their jobs will appreciate judicial review delaying getting them any protection.
I hope federal workers forget to protect judges. Would be lovely.
Again, not even necessarily strict libertarian, just modestly objectively truthful and not completely oxymoronic?
Although the appeals court said the president probably complied with the law he invoked to justify his California deployment, it emphasized that such decisions are subject to judicial review.
He audaciously probably complied with the law?
And it is not what sullum is saying.
Courts can review the process was followed. The 9th agreed the determination for rebellion is deferred to the executive. Sullum hopes you don't notice him switching his argument from prior.
The 9th held determination of rebellion was under the 2nd as we all said and sullum denied in his last article.
Look is crime up or down, just tell me that. Is/was there a migrant caravan or not? Are masks just talismans? This libertarian wants to know.
You had me at 9th circuit
This is worse cope than Newsomes statement. Fuck Jacob. You were wrong. Het over it.
The 9th literally said the law strongly refers to the president as the president said.
When Trump is talking about judicial review, he is literally talking about a judges belief overriding the executives on these laws.
But you decide to go full retard sarc instead of admitting you were wrong once again on the law.
Embarrassing.
Real world: Appeals court blocks Newsom’s bid to reclaim control of National Guard from Trump
Sullumtown: The 9th Circuit Rejects Trump's Audacious Claim!!!!
Sullum has gone full sarc. Never go full sarc.
Maybe Sullum IS Sarc.
The 9th Circuit Rejects Trump's Audacious Claim That He Can Use the National Guard However He Likes
Funny, Robby discribed the same ruling as follows:
A federal appeals court has ruled that the National Guard can remain in Los Angeles, California, as the order to deploy them there was lawful.
MSNBC is not going to hire you Sullum. Unless you can start to But Trump! on 2A issues.
Disclaimer: JS:dr
I can't focus enough to read a Sullum article anymore all I can hear in my head is: "REEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!" Psychosomatic, but painful nonetheless.
I just assume he blames Trump and/or lobbied for Science!
Ok?
So he can deploy the Guard, but the courts *later* get to do . . . what? Tell him he couldn't deploy even though he already did?
This shit is like Rommelman's article saying Trump lost because he didn't get some strawmanned thing. Trump didn't want riots in LA. He wanted to be able to safely carry on his job of deporting illegal aliens. Trump won here in the 9th circuit because he was right that he has the power to use the guard to protect federal assets and put down an uprising. Sullum really had to stretch for a criticism because Trump wasn't arguing he could "do whatever he wants" in court. The quote was referencing his ability to carry out constitutionally defined powers and it's extremely pedantic to pretend that he was arguing for tyrannical powers.
I'm frankly perplexed as to why Trump called on the National Guard in the first place.
He should have called on the Rooftop Koreans. Offered them a de facto moratorium on taxes ("my guys at the IRS will never bother you"), indefinitely, so long as they do what they see fit to keep the peace in California. That's within his power.
So would be pardoning them, if California has a problem with whatever the Rooftop Koreans end up doing to keep things on the up and up.
Unfortunately he could only pardon them at the federal level.
I've stopped going to the blue/lefty shitholes like California and Canada. Too bad, as I used to enjoy visiting them; now it just isn't worth the risk. Let them rot.
It took me over half a lifetime, even though I never felt any call to the city, even as a youth, but now I know the magic formula:
Urbanization = enshittification.
Yes!!! Preach it AT!!!
I’m all for vigilantism, like you so enthusiastically are AT, because like I keep saying to you WE HAVE YOU OUTNUMBERED AND OUTGUNNED.
Enjoy swinging you white supremacist traitor…
The Trump supporters who today argue that the president should have complete discretion to deploy the National Guard as he sees fit surely would have sung a different tune in response to a Democratic president's heavy-handed use of that power.
The TDS-addled shitpiles who didn't object to the Biden admin weaponizing the DOJ are singing another tune now that Trump is complying with the constitution.
Fuck off and die, asshole.
I think you misspelled use thr national guard as granted by law dumdum.
"The three-judge panel unanimously concluded that the president probably complied with the statute he cited to justify the deployment."
That's all the courts are there for!!!
It is not their JOB to run the executive.
The TDS-addled pile of shit Sullum takes the lead in the mobile goal-post race!
Fuck off and die, Sullum; you lose.
"Imagine how Republicans would have reacted if President Joe Biden had unilaterally deployed National Guard members during the COVID-19 pandemic, arguing that they were needed to enforce lockdowns, vaccine or mask mandates, or the federal eviction moratorium in the face of occasionally violent opposition to those policies."
Funny how freedom-loving COVID rebels didn't actually get around to burning, assaulting cops, and looting. Not even a straw man, more like a...vapor man?
And the BIG difference there is one is Constitutional ("protect against invasion") and the other isn't.
There is no "protect against a virus" in the US Constitution.
>subject to judicial review
Yeah, there's probably a district court somewhere that thinks how I put on my pants is subject to judicial review. If everything is justiciable, then we truly do live in an autocracy -- of judges. Funny how I don't see any 'no kings in black robes' protests coming from the left.
I’m struggling to understand why a president ordering the national guard to protect federal officers and assets in the face of organized assault unfolding in a hostile and dysfunctional state is….a bad thing.
Even if Trump overreached, what could he do with NG? Order them to take over California so he may rule over it as new sovereign? Use them as deportation agents? Remember, this is a state that burned down a town because it couldn’t be bothered to fill a reservoir and urges local law enforcement to commit treason by alerting illegal criminals of approaching ICE agents.
Let me guess, it’s all about federalism. If maga was hurling bricks and fireworks at fbi arresting Trump associates, dem governors couldn’t use NG, right? Tell me, who went to jail over Carter page?
And if states defy the law of the nation to “resist” Trump and demonize federal officers carrying out court ordered duties, does that draw a rebuke from reason? What do you call a judge who obstruct justice in an attempt to set an illegal alien free? “Yay judicial branch not beaching to save our favorite people”?
“… Guard members during the COVID-19 pandemic, arguing that they were needed to enforce lockdowns, vaccine or mask mandates, or the federal eviction moratorium in the face of occasionally violent opposition to those policies”
So, imagine that instead of deploying for guard duty of federal buildings and personnel, they were deployed for local law enforcement. Because that is what is being done here, apples and carrots. And this is an important distinction because the guard duty aspect has been in law and case law for over 150 years and doesn’t even need presidential approval for Army, Marines, etc..
And even then, maybe the author should actually look into the law and case law before making it obvious they don’t know either of them.
For example the Posse Comitatus Act applies only to the Army and Air Force. Let that sink in.
Well, point 3 seems like an obvious justification -- federal agents were unable to carry out their legal duties, and threatened by violent crowds.
Point 2 (rebellion) seems like a stretch, but then some of the rioters waving foreign flags doesn't help their case for saying it's not a rebellion.
Sullum trying to make lemons into lemonade - and failing miserably.
Newsom lost on the big points. Governors don’t have a veto on the Executive calling up the National Guard of their states. Substantial difference is due the Executive in his determination to federalize the National Guard. This discretion by the Executive was delegated to him by Congress, utilizing one of their core Article I Powers. Etc.