Newsom wants military out of Los Angeles 'immediately'
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Left: Calif. Gov. Gavin Newsom presents his revised state budget during a news conference in Sacramento, Calif., Wednesday, May 14, 2025 (Photo/Rich Pedroncelli). Right: US President Donald Trump talks with reporters about California Governor Gavin Newsom upon arriving at the White House on June 9, 2025, at the South Lawn in Washington, DC, USA (Photo by Lenin Nolly/NurPhoto via AP).

California Gov. Gavin Newsom took his feud with President Donald Trump over the Los Angeles immigration protests to a federal courtroom in San Francisco on Tuesday, asking a judge to “immediately” get the U.S. military off the streets of the City of Angels.

The Democratic governor wants the court in question to act with haste — and without any input from federal authorities.

In a 28-page ex parte motion for a temporary restraining order, Newsom and the Golden State want U.S. District Judge Charles R. Breyer, a Bill Clinton appointee — and the brother of former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer — to bar the government from using the National Guard and U.S. Marines for immigration raids. And Newsom wants the court to grant relief within roughly two hours of the filing — which occurred around 11 a.m. Tuesday morning.

“In the United States, the police — and not the military — enforce the law,” the motion begins. “This bedrock principle flows from the Founding, finds expression in Acts of Congress, and lives at the core of our civil society. Ours is a Nation of laws, enforced through even-handed justice, and not ruled by military decree. But Defendants, including President Trump and Secretary of Defense [Pete] Hegseth have sought to bring military personnel and a ‘warrior culture’ to the streets of cities and towns where Americans work, go to school, and raise their families.”

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The underlying lawsuit in the case was filed Monday after the 45th and 47th president mobilized the military — at first just the National Guard — on Saturday. Trump assumed control of reserve forces in response to multiple incidents of property destruction as waves of Angeleños sparred with law enforcement amid protests against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) actions that started on Friday throughout the city and county of Los Angeles.

Now, Newsom says he has learned that the situation is so dire that his state cannot wait for the typical speed or adversarial nature of the court system. By filing ex parte, the plaintiffs are essentially telling the court they do not need to wait for the government’s arguments.

“Defendants intend to use unlawfully federalized National Guard troops and Marines to accompany federal immigration enforcement officers on raids throughout Los Angeles,” the ex parte motion goes on. “They will work in active concert with law enforcement, in support of a law enforcement mission, and will physically interact with or detain civilians.”

The motion goes on to call such deployments “unlawful” due to their purported law enforcement component. Newsom also says such deployments “have already proven to be a deeply inflammatory and unnecessary.” The motion argues that using the military in such a fashion is “anathema” to U.S. laws.

“Federal antagonization, through the presence of soldiers in the streets, has already caused real and irreparable damage to the City of Los Angeles, the people who live there, and the State of California,” the filling continues. “They must be stopped, immediately.”

To hear the plaintiffs tell it, “immediately” in this case means by 1 p.m. Pacific Standard Time. If the requested injunction is not granted by then, Newsom argues, his state will suffer “immediate and irreparable harm.”

“Absent immediate injunctive relief, Defendants’ use of the military and the federalized National Guard to patrol communities or otherwise engage in general law enforcement activities creates imminent harm to State Sovereignty, deprives the State of vital resources, escalates tensions and promotes (rather than quells) civil unrest,” the motion reads. “Accordingly, the Plaintiffs seek a TRO [Temporary Restraining Order] and preliminary injunction to preserve the status quo.”

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