Biden judge gives Trump brutal 48-hour deadline over troops in Chicago
Share and Follow

A judge appointed by Biden has set a 48-hour deadline for Donald Trump to reply to a lawsuit initiated by Democratic leaders in Illinois regarding his decision to send the National Guard to Chicago. 

Judge April Perry has given the federal government until midnight on Wednesday to respond and has arranged for a hearing on Thursday concerning the lawsuit filed on Monday.

Meanwhile, Perry has chosen not to halt the deployment temporarily, leaving the option open for Trump to deploy up to 200 Texas National Guard troops overnight.

According to The New York Times, the troops will be flown in via military aircraft and will begin operations on the ground no sooner than Wednesday. 

The lawsuit railing against the move alleges that ‘these advances in President Trump’s long-declared ”War” on Chicago and Illinois are unlawful and dangerous.’

‘The American people, regardless of where they reside, should not live under the threat of occupation by the United States military, particularly not simply because their city or state leadership has fallen out of a president’s favor,’ the lawsuit says.

Trump has argued that the troops are needed to help fight crime in Chicago and to ensure that federal agents can enforce immigration laws in the city, which limits cooperation with federal immigration enforcement.

The president threatened Monday to use emergency powers against rebellion to deploy more troops into Democratic-led US cities, intensifying his rhetoric as his attempts to mobilize the military face legal challenges.

A Biden-appointed judge is giving Donald Trump 48 hours to respond to a lawsuit led by Democrat leaders in Illinois over deploying the National Guard to Chicago

A Biden-appointed judge is giving Donald Trump 48 hours to respond to a lawsuit led by Democrat leaders in Illinois over deploying the National Guard to Chicago

Judge April Perry (pictured) set a midnight Wednesday deadline for the response from the federal government and scheduled a Thursday hearing in the lawsuit filed Monday

Judge April Perry (pictured) set a midnight Wednesday deadline for the response from the federal government and scheduled a Thursday hearing in the lawsuit filed Monday

The Republican leader openly mulled use of the Insurrection Act after a federal judge in Oregon temporarily halted a National Guard deployment in Portland, while another judge in Illinois allowed a similar move to proceed for now in Chicago. 

Both cities have seen surges of federal agents as part of Trump’s mass deportation drive, prompting protests outside immigration processing facilities.

‘We have an Insurrection Act for a reason. If I had to enact it I would do that,’ Trump told reporters in the Oval Office.

‘If people were being killed and courts were holding us up or governors or mayors were holding us up, sure I would do that.’

Illinois officials had filed a suit seeking to block the deployment in Chicago, but Judge Perry, an appointee of Trump’s Democratic predecessor Joe Biden, declined to issue an immediate temporary restraining order.

She scheduled a full hearing on the matter for Thursday and asked the government to inform the court to provide more information.

The debate mushroomed after it became known that Republican-led Texas was planning to send 200 of its federalized National Guard troops to Illinois, a move that infuriated Democratic Governor JB Pritzker.

‘They should stay the hell out of Illinois,’ said Pritzker.

He also accused federal immigration agents conducting raids in Chicago of ‘thuggery,’ using ‘excessive force,’ and illegally detaining US citizens.

Trump has argued that the troops are needed to help fight crime in Chicago and to ensure that federal agents can enforce immigration laws in the city, which limits cooperation with federal immigration enforcement

Trump has argued that the troops are needed to help fight crime in Chicago and to ensure that federal agents can enforce immigration laws in the city, which limits cooperation with federal immigration enforcement

Trump's move has infuriated Democratic Illinois Governor JB Pritzker (pictured)

Trump’s move has infuriated Democratic Illinois Governor JB Pritzker (pictured)

Trump’s comments about the centuries-old Insurrection Act came just minutes after Pritzker warned that Trump was creating a pre-meditated ‘escalation of violence’ as a pretext to invoke the emergency powers. 

‘The Trump administration is following a playbook: cause chaos, create fear and confusion, make it seem like peaceful protesters are a mob by firing gas pellets and tear gas canisters at them,’ Pritzker told a press conference.

‘Why? To create the pretext for invoking the Insurrection Act so that he can send the military to our city.’

Trump over the weekend authorized deployment of 700 National Guard members to Chicago despite the opposition of elected Democratic leaders including Pritzker and the city’s mayor.

In their lawsuit, the state Attorney General Kwame Raoul and counsel for Chicago accused Trump of using US troops ‘to punish his political enemies.’

‘The American people, regardless of where they reside, should not live under the threat of occupation by the United States military, particularly not simply because their city or state leadership has fallen out of a president’s favor,’ they said.

In the press conference with Pritzker, Raoul described such planned deployments to Illinois as ‘unlawful and unconstitutional, no matter where these forces come from.’

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has defended the plan to send troops to Chicago, claiming that the third-largest US city is ‘a war zone.’

Protesters stand and chant in the Brighton Park neighborhood of Chicago, on Saturday, after protesters learned that U.S. Border Patrol shot a woman Saturday morning on Chicago's Southwest Side

Protesters stand and chant in the Brighton Park neighborhood of Chicago, on Saturday, after protesters learned that U.S. Border Patrol shot a woman Saturday morning on Chicago’s Southwest Side

Police and Federal officers stand guard an area by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Portland, Oregon on Sunday

Police and Federal officers stand guard an area by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Portland, Oregon on Sunday

Trump has similarly called Portland ‘war-ravaged,’ but District Judge Karin Immergut issued a temporary block on the Oregon troop deployment, saying ‘the president’s determination was simply untethered to the facts.’

‘This is a nation of Constitutional law, not martial law,’ wrote Immergut, a Trump appointee.

The Trump administration is appealing the ruling, the White House said.

Illinois and Oregon are not the first states to file legal challenges against the Trump administration’s deployment of the National Guard.

California filed suit after Trump sent troops to Los Angeles earlier this year to quell protests sparked by a crackdown on undocumented migrants, with the case still working its way through courts.

Share and Follow
You May Also Like
Islanders' pair of games to finish road trip will be extremely telling

Crucial Upcoming Games Set to Define Islanders’ Road Trip Success

RALEIGH, N.C. — By the time the Islanders touch down back home…
Lufthansa flight flew for 10 minutes without conscious pilot, investigation reveals

Biblical Studies Student Accused of In-Flight Assault and Teen Stabbings

A Lufthansa flight traveling from Chicago to Frankfurt had to make an…
3 Wright-Patterson Air Force Base personnel found dead in Ohio

Tragic Discovery: Three Wright-Patterson Air Force Base Personnel Found Dead in Ohio

Ohio authorities are currently investigating the deaths of three employees from Wright-Patterson…
LSU professor emeritus compares Charlie Kirk to KKK leader after governor proposes statue on campus

LSU Professor Criticizes Proposed Campus Statue, Draws Controversial Comparison to Charlie Kirk

Two professors in Louisiana have voiced their strong disapproval after Republican Governor…
Moment Prince Harry puts on cringeworthy American accent

Prince Harry Adopts American Accent in Light-Hearted Moment

Prince Harry found himself both amused and a bit embarrassed after facing…
FILE - Stewart McLaurin, president of the White House Historical Association, speaks as President Donald Trump listens during a visit to The People

White House East Wing Demolition Sparks Controversy, But Historian Highlights Potential for Renewal

WASHINGTON (AP) — Stewart McLaurin anticipated what was to come. A entire…
Jury deliberations continue in Sonya Massey murder trial

Jury Weighs Verdict in High-Profile Sonya Massey Murder Case

In Chicago, the jury is still deliberating in the high-profile murder trial…
Which Jets could be on the move before 2025 NFL trade deadline?

Jets Players Who Might Be Traded Before the 2025 NFL Deadline

The trade deadline is set for Tuesday at 4 p.m., and all…