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|    alt.politics.trump    |    The politics of badass Donald Trump    |    145,682 messages    |
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|    Message 145,043 of 145,682    |
|    super70s to All    |
|    Trump quietly pulls troops from LA, Chic    |
|    11 Feb 26 21:13:53    |
      XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.republicans       From: super70s@super70s.invalid              Trump quietly pulls National Guard from Chicago and Los Angeles after       series of court losses       By Alex Woodward       The Independent       Wed, February 11, 2026 at 10:38 AM CST              Donald Trump's administration has quietly withdrawn federalized       National Guard troops from Democratic cities after a series of court       rulings struck down the president's plans.              The withdrawal quietly concluded last month, with no public       acknowledgment from the White House or Department of Defense despite       the administration's insistence that U.S. military assets needed to be       deployed on American streets to curb violent crime and support       immigration enforcement.              The end of those deployments, first reported by The Washington Post, is       mentioned only by the U.S. Northern Command, stating that troops sent       to Chicago, Portland and Los Angeles have "completed demobilizing       activities."              That includes the withdrawal of more than 5,000 troops from California,       roughly 500 troops in Chicago and another 200 in Oregon at the       president's direction. They were sent home by January 21, according to       the Pentagon.              Those deployments cost nearly half a billion dollars, according to the       Congressional Budget Office.              A month before those deployments ended, Trump announced on his Truth       Social account that the administration would be removing service       members "despite the fact that CRIME has been greatly reduced by having       these great Patriots in those cities, and ONLY by that fact."              "Portland, Los Angeles, and Chicago were GONE if it weren't for the       Federal Government stepping in," he wrote. "We will come back, perhaps       in a much different and stronger form, when crime begins to soar again       - Only a question of time!"              White House deputy press secretary Abigail Jackson downplayed the news       that the administration had withdrawn those troops, as of last month,       saying that The Washington Post was covering an "announcement the       President made HIMSELF over a month ago," followed by three clown       emojis.              Last year, the president began ordering National Guard troops to       several Democratic-led cities, an effort that one federal judge rebuked       as Trump's attempt to create "a national police force with the       president as its chief."              Legal challenges from state and local officials accused the       administration of using American streets for political theater, and in       December, the Supreme Court blocked the administration from sending the       military into Chicago. Trump later announced the withdrawal of service       members from other cities.              The Supreme Court, weighing in on the legal battle over boots on the       ground in Illinois, appeared to reject the administration's argument       that protests against the president's anti-immigration agenda are so       volatile that only the National Guard, under Trump's orders, can stop       them.              "For the first time, crickets from Donald Trump," wrote Illinois       Governor J.B. Pritzker. "After losing in court multiple times to       Illinois and other states, the National Guard was finally quietly       pulled out of our streets. The pressure is working, and we've got to       keep at it."              More than 2,500 National Guard members are still in Washington, D.C.,       but under a separate arrangement for a mission that is expected to end       this year.              National Guard members were initially deployed to the nation's capital       to help fight crime. But have often spent time picking up trash while       others patrolled the National Mall and train stations.              In November, two West Virginia National Guard service members were shot       near the White House.              Air Force Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe remains in inpatient rehabilitation       after he sustained a gunshot to the head. His colleague, U.S. Army Spc.       Sarah Beckstrom, died one day after the attack.              There are also troops in Memphis and New Orleans through an agreement       with the Trump administration but under the direction of their       respective state's governors.              Last year, Trump had federalized the normally state-authorized National       Guards, going above the command and objections of Democratic governors.              Democratic officials and civil rights groups feared the president was       testing the limits of his authority to send active-duty military into       American streets for politically charged missions, and violating       service members' commitments to stay out of domestic politics in the       process.              Trump deployed troops to Chicago, Portland and Los Angeles under Title       10, which allowed the president to exert authority over a state's       National Guard. But the military cannot perform law enforcement       activities, like making arrests or performing searches.              In January, the Pentagon ordered roughly 1,500 active-duty troops to       prepare for deployment to Minneapolis in response to protests against       the administration's surge of immigration officers and violent raids              That deployment never happened, and the administration pulled out       Border Patrol's "commander-at-large" Greg Bovino and roughly 700       federal officers after the fatal shootings of demonstrators Renee Good       and Alex Pretti.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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