


Just hours after U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer issued a temporary restraining order against the Trump administration related to the President's federalization of 4,000 California Army National Guard soldiers, ordering that Trump must return control of the Guard back to California, a three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals blocked enforcement of the order pending a hearing.
Newsom quickly unpinned his celebratory post from X.
The three-judge panel is made up of two Trump appointees (Mark Bennett and Eric Miller) and one Biden appointee (Jennifer Sung).
As my colleague Joe Cunningham wrote, Judge Breyer found Trump's actions violated federal law in three ways:
No Legal Justification: Trump relied on a 1903 statute allowing National Guard federalization only during foreign invasion, rebellion against the U.S. government, or presidential inability to execute federal laws. The court found none of these conditions were met, conducting an extensive analysis in an attempt to show the Los Angeles protests did not constitute "rebellion" under the law's historical meaning.
Procedural Violations: Federal law requires federalization orders to be issued "through the governors of the States." Trump's administration argued they complied by typing "THROUGH: THE GOVERNOR OF CALIFORNIA" on orders never sent to Newsom. The court rejected this interpretation by saying Newsom only learned of the federalization when his adjutant general forwarded him the orders.
Constitutional Violations: The unlawful seizure violated the Tenth Amendment by preventing California from using its Guard for legitimate state purposes like fighting wildfires and combating fentanyl trafficking.
Editor's Note: President Trump isn't going to allow lawlessness to reign in America. We will not have a repeat of 2020's "Summer of Love."
Help RedState continue to report on the president's crackdown on rioters in Los Angeles and expose the truth about the violent left trying to destroy our great country. Join RedState VIP and use promo code FIGHT to get 60% off your membership.