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BREAKING: Unprecedented Move Three conservative Justices on the Supreme Court of the United States (Barrett, Kavanaugh, Roberts) sided with the three liberal justices to block President Trump from deploying the National Guard in Chicago. This is the first time the Supreme Court has ruled against Trump in a meaningful way since he returned to the White House — Supreme Court Pushes Back on Trump in Major Showdown Get the Full Breakdown Now
BREAKING: Unprecedented Move Three conservative Justices on the Supreme Court of the United States (Barrett, Kavanaugh, Roberts) sided with the three liberal justices to block President Trump from deploying the National Guard in Chicago. This is the first time the Supreme Court has ruled against Trump in a meaningful way since he returned to the White House — Supreme Court Pushes Back on Trump in Major Showdown Get the Full Breakdown Now
Supreme Court Pushes Back on Presidential Authority in National Guard Dispute
In a decision that immediately reshaped the balance of power between the White House and the judiciary, the Supreme Court on Monday blocked President Trump from deploying the National Guard to Chicago, according to court filings and early reports. In a rare alignment, three justices often considered part of the Court’s conservative wing—Amy Coney Barrett, Brett Kavanaugh, and Chief Justice John Roberts—joined the Court’s three liberal justices to halt the deployment, forming a decisive majority.
The ruling centers on questions of federal authority, state consent, and the limits of executive power during domestic unrest. While the administration argued that the deployment was necessary to restore order, opponents contended that it bypassed state and local officials and stretched federal law beyond its intent. The Court’s order temporarily blocks the action while the underlying legal challenges proceed, signaling skepticism toward the administration’s legal rationale.
Legal analysts described the move as a significant moment, noting that it marks one of the most consequential judicial checks on President Trump since his return to office. Beyond its immediate impact on Chicago, the decision underscores the Court’s willingness to assert its independence in high-stakes disputes over executive power—an approach likely to influence future clashes between the presidency, the states, and the courts.