Trump
Orders Major Expansion of National Guard’s Role in Law Enforcement
An
executive order released on Monday directs the creation of specialized Guard
units to quell civil disturbances in each state and seeks civilian volunteers
to assist federal agents in Washington.
John
Ismay Helene
Cooper Eric
Schmitt
By John
Ismay Helene
Cooper and Eric Schmitt
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/25/us/politics/trump-national-guard.html
Aug. 25,
2025
President
Trump directed the Defense Department on Monday to take a larger role in
domestic law enforcement, including by “quelling civil disturbances,” as he
threatens to broaden deployments of the National Guard in cities run by his
political enemies.
The
executive order, released by the White House on Monday morning, also formalizes
the creation of specially trained National Guard units in the District of
Columbia and all 50 states that can be mobilized quickly for “ensuring the
public safety and order.”
The
Pentagon did not immediately respond to questions about the order, which came
two weeks after Mr. Trump declared a “crime emergency” in the District of
Columbia and deployed National Guard troops to the nation’s capital, over the
objections of local officials who have said crime in the city is at its lowest
level in decades.
In a
statement, the White House said the president was ordering “common-sense
measures to ensure long-term safety of our nation’s capital.”
The
statement said the executive order would increase “participation across
agencies” in enabling more specially trained personnel to deliver on Mr.
Trump’s campaign promise and “constitutional obligation to make D.C. safe and
beautiful again.”
Mr. Trump
has mused openly about expanding the deployments to other cities, particularly
Democratic strongholds like New York, Chicago and Baltimore, saying crime there
is out of control. On Monday, Mr. Trump said he could “solve” crime in Chicago
in a week, though he hedged about whether he planned to move ahead with sending
troops there.
While
Guard troops have been temporarily mobilized by governors in the past to
respond to natural disasters and occasionally for civil unrest, the order
appears to carve out a much larger domestic role for the National Guard.
According
to government documents, Guard troops can be mobilized for duty within a state
or territory by a governor in response to “a crisis or a natural disaster, or
in support of special events when local, tribal and state capabilities are
overwhelmed, exhausted or unavailable.” The president can also federalize the
Guard himself, as Mr. Trump did in deploying members of the California National
Guard to Los Angeles in June — over the objections of the state’s governor.
Monday’s
order appears to create a force of Guard soldiers that could be called out by
the White House regardless of whether state and local law enforcement are
available and able to handle civil disturbances, raising significant legal
questions.
“Quelling
civil disturbances is the responsibility of state and local law enforcement
except in the most extreme instances,” said Elizabeth Goitein, a senior
director at the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University’s law school.
“Having soldiers police protests, as this order envisions, threatens
fundamental liberties and public safety, and it violates a centuries-old
principle against involving the military in domestic law enforcement.”
Under an
1878 law called the Posse Comitatus Act, it is normally illegal to use federal
troops on domestic soil for policing purposes. But Mr. Trump, in federalizing
the California Guard, invoked a statute, Section 12406 of Title 10 of the U.S.
Code, that allows him to call National Guard members and units into federal
service under certain circumstances, including during a rebellion against the
authority of the federal government.
In
California, where Mr. Trump deployed roughly 4,000 members of the National
Guard to Los Angeles, citing protests over immigration raids, state officials
opened a legal challenge to the deployment, which a federal judge had ruled to
be illegal before an appeals court blocked the ruling.
The order
also directs a task force in Washington led by a White House adviser, Stephen
Miller, to create an online portal for “Americans with law enforcement or other
relevant backgrounds and experience” to apply to join federal agents in
enforcing Mr. Trump’s “crime emergency” order in the District of Columbia.
As of
Sunday, there were 2,274 Guard troops deployed to Washington. Only 934 of those
troops are part of the D.C. National Guard. The rest have been mobilized from
units in Louisiana, Mississippi, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessee and West
Virginia.
On
Sunday, Guard soldiers in Washington who were previously unarmed began carrying
their service weapons while on patrol, a task that is outside traditional norms
for Guard troops on domestic missions. According to a report published by the
Congressional Research Service in April, the typical jobs given to U.S.
military personnel who have been mobilized to assist civil authorities include
transporting supplies, clearing or constructing roads, and controlling traffic
during missions such as border security, natural disaster response and public
health emergencies.
The
specialized force proposed for the Guard in Washington would be deputized to
enforce federal law, according to the executive order, which also directs the
creation of a standing National Guard “quick reaction force” that would be
available for rapid deployment anywhere in the country. (Federal law
enforcement entities already maintain a nationwide network of trained special
agents who can respond in times of crisis, like the F.B.I.’s Hostage Rescue
Team based in Quantico, Va., which can be rapidly deployed anywhere in the
United States for counterterrorism missions, and special weapons and tactics
teams at each F.B.I. field office.)
By
directing Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to train a specialized D.C. National
Guard unit dedicated to “ensuring public safety” in Washington, Mr. Trump is
essentially requiring the city’s Guard to come up with a rapid-response-style
unit that can deploy quickly when he decides the need has risen.
Military
analysts say that is what the National Guard trains to do anyway — deploy
quickly, although usually in the event of a natural disaster like a hurricane.
Guard troops have also deployed to respond to political crises, like the Jan.
6, 2021, attack on the Capitol by Mr. Trump’s supporters, and during the Black
Lives Matter protests that erupted after the Minneapolis police killed George
Floyd in 2020.
It is
unusual, though, for National Guard troops to just live on standby waiting for
the president to decide he wants to target crime in a city of his choosing.
Guard troops train part time, often one weekend a month and two weeks a year,
to respond to emergencies. They do not sit around waiting for the president to
deploy them as a law enforcement arm.
“Most of
them are not full-time soldiers; they have separate jobs,” said Pete Feaver, a
political science professor at Duke University. “Maintaining a specialized
force at a high amount of readiness is tantamount to mobilizing them.”
John
Ismay is a reporter covering the Pentagon for The Times. He served as an
explosive ordnance disposal officer in the U.S. Navy.
Helene
Cooper is a Pentagon correspondent for The Times. She was previously an editor,
diplomatic correspondent and White House correspondent.
Eric
Schmitt is a national security correspondent for The Times. He has reported on
U.S. military affairs and counterterrorism for more than three decades.


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