District of Columbia v. Trump (Nat Guard deployment 202)
Case Overview
Washington, D.C. sued the Trump administration after the president deployed more than 2,000 National Guard troops into the city to conduct armed patrols, searches, and arrests — without the Mayor's consent. A federal district court issued a preliminary injunction in November 2025, finding the deployment likely violated D.C.'s constitutional home rule authority, but the DC Circuit stayed that order pending appeal. The legal question is whether the federal government can unilaterally place a U.S. city under military command using an obscure provision of D.C.'s home rule charter — without any approval from the city's elected government.
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The Application
The Trump administration deployed over 2,000 National Guard troops to Washington, D.C. for armed patrols, searches, and arrests without seeking or obtaining the Mayor's approval or authorization. The district court found this unilateral military deployment likely exceeded federal statutory authority and violated D.C.'s constitutional home rule protections.
The Conclusion
A federal district court issued a preliminary injunction in November 2025 finding the deployment likely violated D.C.'s home rule authority, but the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals stayed that injunction pending appeal, leaving the military deployment in effect during appellate review.
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