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Last Thursday, a federal judge in San Francisco issued a temporary restraining order against President Donald Trump's ...
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Tuesday defended the deployment of National Guardsmen and Marines to Los Angeles amid ...
The Insurrection Act lets the U.S. president deploy troops domestically to suppress civil disorder, insurrection or rebellion.
Legal scholars say Trump’s memo authorizing the deployment of National Guard and Marines may stretch presidential powers beyond their limits ...
President Donald Trump has hinted that he may invoke the Insurrection Act in response to ongoing protests in Los Angeles over his immigration policies. When asked in the Oval Office whether he would ...
As Los Angeles protests turn into a mass movement against his rule and approval ratings fall, US President Donald Trump ...
I do want to ask you about, of course, what's unfolding right back here on — in the United States, and we're seeing the Trump administration ... to invoke the Insurrection Act.
In the past, Trump’s views on the military and concerns about ... Looming over the discussion is the Insurrection Act, which Trump sought to invoke during his first term. It gives the president ...
Donald Trump has deployed National Guard troops to California following two days of protests against immigration raids.
Trump's National Guard deployment to Los Angeles and recent comments signal more sweeping executive actions are possible. Is the Insurrection Act one of them?
President Donald Trump appears to be perilously close to invoking a law from the early 19 th century, the Insurrection Act, as a basis for deploying regular troops to police American cities.
Michelle Cottle, David French and Tressie McMillan Cottom dissect Trump’s reach for power.