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Explained: Why a US appeals court may revisit Donald Trump’s Portland troop ruling

Explained: Why a US appeals court may revisit Donald Trump’s Portland troop ruling

Trump wins court battle to deploy Oregon National Guard, raising alarm over presidential power limits/Image: AP

A federal appeals court decision that handed Donald Trump a legal victory on deploying the Oregon National Guard to Portland is now under threat — as a judge calls for a rare full-court review that could overturn it.

Driving the news

On Monday, a three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 2-1 that Trump has the authority to federalise Oregon’s National Guard and deploy them to Portland to “protect federal property”. The decision lifted a lower-court injunction that had blocked the move.But within hours, another Ninth Circuit judge formally requested a “vote on whether the case should be reheard” — a process known as an en banc review. That means all 29 active judges on the country’s largest appellate court will now vote on whether to reconsider the case. If they do, a new panel of 11 judges (including the chief judge) will rehear arguments.

Why it matters

The outcome will shape the limits of presidential power over state militias — a constitutional faultline not tested in decades. If the panel’s decision stands, Trump could retain control over Oregon’s National Guard and potentially deploy them with minimal justification. Critics warn that it would hand the executive branch sweeping powers to override state authority and suppress protests under the guise of law enforcement.

The legal battle so far

The initial block: District Judge Karin Immergut (a Trump appointee) halted the deployment, calling Trump’s claims of a “rebellion” in Portland “untethered to the facts”. Portland, she noted, had seen only small demonstrations outside an ICE office.Circumvention attempt: After that ruling, Trump tried to deploy federalised California National Guard troops into Oregon — prompting Immergut to issue a second order banning any such deployment.The appeal: Two Trump-appointed appellate judges, Ryan Nelson and Bridget Bade, overturned Immergut’s orders, saying the president likely acted within his statutory powers to federalise the Guard when “unable with the regular forces to execute the laws of the United States.”The dissent: Judge Susan Graber, a Clinton appointee, issued a scathing dissent, calling the decision “absurd” and a threat to core constitutional principles. She mocked government claims that Portland was a “war zone”, noting protesters often wore “chicken suits, inflatable frog costumes, or nothing at all.”

The politics and stakes

Oregon officials have united against the ruling.Governor Tina Kotek urged Trump to “send all the National Guard members home” and said there is no insurrection or public safety crisis.Attorney General Dan Rayfield warned that if the decision stands, the president would have “unilateral power to put Oregon soldiers on our streets with almost no justification.”The Ninth Circuit’s ideological makeup could now determine the outcome: 16 of its 29 active judges were appointed by Democratic presidents, 13 by Republicans. If the full court agrees to rehear the case, the dynamics could shift dramatically.

The big picture

This is one of the most significant tests in decades of federal authority versus state sovereignty.The case could set a precedent on how broadly a president can interpret “rebellion” or “lawlessness” to justify deploying state troops.It’s also a bellwether for Trump’s second-term strategy of using federalised state forces to police dissent — a tactic that many legal experts say risks eroding civil liberties and the balance of power between Washington and the states.For now, Trump retains control over Oregon’s National Guard — but whether he can actually put boots on Portland’s streets will depend on how the Ninth Circuit’s next move plays out. A decision on whether to rehear the case is expected after both sides submit briefs by Wednesday midnight. Go to Source

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