Deploy
National Guard to Chicago? Trump Says He Has ‘The Right to Do Anything I Want
to Do.’
President
Trump, who has sent the military into Los Angeles and Washington, has targeted
states and cities governed by Democrats.
Chris
Cameron
By Chris
Cameron
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/26/us/politics/trump-national-guard-chicago-dictator.html
Aug. 26,
2025
President
Trump declared on Tuesday that he had unlimited power as president to deploy
the National Guard in any state, after musing whether people would call him a
dictator for doing so.
In a
televised cabinet meeting that lasted more than three hours, Mr. Trump attacked
Gov. JB Pritzker of Illinois, a Democrat who has pushed back against a threat
by the president to deploy troops in Chicago in an expansion of the crackdown
on crime he is conducting in Washington.
“You have
a guy in Illinois, the governor of Illinois, saying that crime has been much
better in Chicago recently and Trump is a dictator,” Mr. Trump said. “Most
people are saying, ‘If you call him a dictator, if he stops crime, he can be
whatever he wants’ — I am not a dictator, by the way.”
About
half an hour later, Mr. Trump said that he “would have much more respect for
Pritzker” if the governor approved a National Guard deployment in his state.
“Not that
I don’t have — I would — the right to do anything I want to do,” Mr. Trump
said. “I’m the president of the United States. If I think our country is in
danger — and it is in danger in these cities — I can do it.”
Referring
to Mr. Pritzker, Mr. Trump continued: “No problem going in and solving, you
know, his difficulties. But it would be nice if they’d call and they say,
‘Would you do it?’”
Mr.
Pritzker, responding on social media, said: “No, Donald. You can’t do whatever
you want.”
It is
unclear whether Mr. Trump will send the Guard into Chicago, where he may have
limited ability to deploy the show of force as he did in Washington, a federal
district where the president controls the local National Guard. In Los Angeles,
when he deployed the Guard in June to quell protests against his immigration
crackdown, he invoked an obscure statute letting presidents call the Guard into
federal service during a rebellion against the authority of the federal
government.
But in
recent days he has spoken of deploying the Guard in other cities led by
Democrats, including Chicago, Baltimore, San Francisco and New York. And his
remark on Tuesday is his latest assertion of his maximalist view of
presidential power. During his re-election campaign last year, Mr. Trump said
that he wouldn’t be a dictator “except for Day 1.”
Mr. Trump
has also attacked the counterweights to his own authority in government,
particularly focusing on Democratic governors and cities governed by Democratic
mayors. The president has not suggested sending troops to cities with higher
crime in states that lean Republican.
Mr. Trump
has long been preoccupied with Chicago, characterizing it as dangerous and
ravaged by crime. Although high crime rates have persisted for decades in
Chicago, violent crime there has dropped since the pandemic, and murders are
down by 50 percent since 2021. Over the last year, crime has fallen in nearly
every major category tracked by the Chicago Police Department.
Chris
Cameron is a Times reporter covering Washington, focusing on breaking news and
the Trump administration.


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