President Donald Trump announced Wednesday that he's pulling the National Guard out of Chicago, Los Angeles, and Portland, ending a controversial deployment that sparked legal battles and accusations of federal overreach. But if you think this is over, think again. Trump made clear the troops could return if crime starts climbing.
The Retreat Follows Court Defeats
The withdrawal comes after a series of legal setbacks that essentially backed Trump into a corner. The U.S. Supreme Court had already blocked his attempt to deploy troops in Illinois, gutting his legal justification for similar moves in other states. The high court emphasized that federal control over National Guard troops should only happen in "exceptional" situations, which apparently these weren't.
Then, just before Trump's announcement, a federal appellate court ruled that California National Guard troops must be returned to Governor Gavin Newsom's control. The courts weren't buying what the administration was selling.
Trump Defends The Mission
Despite losing in court, Trump insisted the deployments accomplished their mission. "We are removing the National Guard from Chicago, Los Angeles, and Portland, despite the fact that CRIME has been greatly reduced by having these great Patriots in those cities," Trump wrote on Truth Social Wednesday.
Local leaders and Democrats had hammered the deployments from the start, calling them unnecessary political theater. According to reports, they argued that isolated incidents were blown out of proportion to justify putting troops on city streets. The criticism painted the move as federal overreach dressed up as law enforcement.
A Warning Shot About What Comes Next
Trump made sure everyone understood this isn't necessarily permanent. He noted that National Guard presence had supposedly led to significant crime reductions, then added an ominous kicker about what happens if those numbers reverse.
"We will come back, perhaps in a much different and stronger form, when crime begins to soar again – Only a question of time!" Trump wrote in his post.
That "much different and stronger form" phrase is doing a lot of work there, leaving plenty of room for speculation about what he might try next.
The Numbers Tell A Different Story
Here's where things get interesting. After Trump's announcement, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson released data showing violent crime in 2025 hit its lowest levels in over a decade. That timeline raises questions about whether the National Guard presence actually caused any crime reduction, or if Trump was simply taking credit for existing trends.
Meanwhile, military officials had already been quietly scaling back deployments as the legal challenges mounted. The withdrawal announcement essentially formalized what was already happening on the ground.
The legal battle between California and the Trump administration over National Guard control marks a significant boundary-setting moment for federal-state relations. The courts drew a line about when presidents can commandeer state troops, and that line matters going forward regardless of who's in office.




