US judge blocks Trump's National Guard deployment in Los Angeles
A federal judge blocked President Trump's deployment of National Guard troops in Los Angeles and ordered their return to California's governor's control. The ruling on Wednesday addressed a deployment initiated in June following protests related to immigration raids.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA federal judge blocked President Trump's deployment of National Guard troops in Los Angeles and ordered their return to California's governor's control. The ruling on Wednesday addressed a deployment initiated in June following protests related to immigration raids. Judge Breyer stated the Trump administration failed to justify federal control of the state's National Guard, despite arguments that federal immigration agents were still being targeted. The judge also rejected the administration's argument that courts shouldn't intervene in presidential control of state National Guard troops during emergencies. The order is delayed until December 15 to allow the Trump administration time to appeal, with the White House stating they expect to win the issue ultimately. This follows similar contested deployments of National Guard troops to other cities like Portland and Washington D.C.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedJudge Breyer said the Trump administration was effectively creating a national police force made up of state troops.
California Governor Gavin Newsom sued soon after Trump first deployed thousands of troops in June.
President Trump exercised his lawful authority to deploy National Guard troops to support federal officers and assets following violent riots.
The Trump administration had not proven that the city's protests against immigration justified taking federal control of the state's National Guard.
A federal judge blocked President Donald Trump's deployment of National Guard troops in Los Angeles.