Federal judge rules Trump’s Portland National Guard deployment unconstitutional in permanent injunction
A federal judge on Friday ruled that the Trump administration’s attempt to deploy National Guard troops to Portland, Oregon, was unconstitutional.
On Sunday, U.S. District Court Judge Karin Immergut, a Trump appointee, temporarily extended an order blocking the administration from deploying troops to The Rose City, saying the government failed to justify the move.
In the Sunday evening order, Immergut temporarily blocked “Defendant Secretary of Defense [Pete] Hegseth from implementing” memorandums that authorized the federalization and deployment of National Guard members from Oregon, Texas and California into Portland.
The injunction remained in effect until Friday.
WHITE HOUSE REBUKES ‘EGREGIOUS’ COURT ORDER BLOCKING TROOP DEPLOYMENTS AMID PORTLAND UNREST
Friday’s 106-page ruling makes the order permanent.
It followed a three-day trial over whether protests at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement building in Portland warranted use of the military domestically under federal law.
The administration said the troops were needed to protect federal personnel and property.
Immergut said in the ruling the “evidence demonstrates that these deployments, which were objected to by Oregon’s governor and not requested by the federal officials in charge of protection of the ICE building, exceeded the President’s authority” because he wasn’t able to demonstrate there was a rebellion or threat of rebellion that couldn’t be enforced without the military.
The judge added that “even giving great deference to the President’s determination, the President did not have a lawful basis to federalize the National Guard.”
Immergut called the order unconstitutional, saying that it violated the 10th Amendment, “which ‘reserves to the States’ any powers not expressly delegated to the federal government in the Constitution.”
The city of Portland and state of Oregon had sued the administration over the deployment in September after Hegseth sent 200 troops to the city.
The administration can appeal the decision.
The administration also faces a temporary injunction in Chicago, where a judge has barred the administration from deploying troops.
You may also like
By mfnnews
search
categories
Archives
navigation
Recent posts
- LAST-MINUTE LIFELINE: Trump Says Iran Won’t Execute 8 Women After He Demanded Their Release April 23, 2026
- BOMBSHELL DOJ REPORT: Southern Poverty Law Center Charged With Fraud, Funneled Funds to KKK [WATCH] April 23, 2026
- ‘POWER GRAB’: WaPo Editorial Board Unloads on Virginia Redistricting Referendum April 23, 2026
- CAUGHT ON CAMERA: Omar ERUPTS as Reporter Questions Net Worth Discrepancy — ‘I THINK YOU’RE STUPID’ [WATCH] April 23, 2026
- ‘IT’S POSSIBLE!’: Trump Signals New U.S.–Iran Talks Within Days as Ceasefire Holds April 23, 2026
- SPLC’s Offshore Assets Ballooned as Embattled Left-Wing Darling Secretly Funded KKK and Other ‘Violent Extremist Groups’—and Reported Owning Accounts in the Cayman Islands April 23, 2026
- Fall From Grapes: Winery Owned by Ilhan Omar’s Husband Folds One Year After Omar Said It Was Worth Up to $5 Million April 23, 2026











Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.