WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s move to send National Guard troops and Marines to Los Angeles amid unrest over his immigration policies has given new weight to a lingering question: How far can a president go in using the milit to quell domestic disturbances?
For now, the milit has a limited role in Los Angeles, focused on protecting federal buildings and activities, but that hasn’t stopped California’s Democratic leaders, including Gov. Gavin Newsom, from vehemently objecting to Trump’s actions.
Trump has not taken the more drastic step of invoking the Insurrection Act, the name given to a series of legal provisions that allows the president, in certain circumstances, to enlist the milit to conduct civilian law enforcement activities.
But Elizabeth Goiten, an expert on national security at the Brennan Center for Justice, noted that the June 7 memorandum that Trump issued authorizing milit involvement in support of immigration enforcement makes no reference to Los Angeles, meaning it applies nationwide.
“That’s just a red alert,” she said. “If we have the milit being pre-emptively deployed throughout the country to effectively police protests, that is the hallmark of authoritarian rule.”
Although the milit’s role may initially be limited to a protective function, Goiten said that could easily be expanded in certain situations to include use of force and detention of protesters even without invoking the Insurrection Act. She pointed to the response of federal agencies under Trump during protests in Portland and Washington, D.C., in 2020.