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Trump’s National Guard deployments reignite 200-year-old legal debate over state vs. federal power

Trump’s National Guard deployments reignite 200-year-old legal debate over state vs. federal power

  • The deployment of National Guard troops by President Donald Trump to cities like Portland, Oregon, and Chicago has reignited a 200-year-old legal debate over state vs. federal power, specifically regarding the 10th Amendment.
  • The 10th Amendment’s language suggests that powers not delegated to the federal government are reserved to the states or the people, but its interpretation has been inconsistent and often contentious over the years, with the Supreme Court treating it like a “magician’s hat” that can pull out different state powers depending on the context.
  • The Trump administration’s attempts to deploy National Guard troops have sparked lawsuits from Democratic governors, arguing that there is no national emergency in their states and that deploying troops without their consent is illegal under the 10th Amendment.
  • The Supreme Court has a history of weighing in on federalism issues, but its decisions have been inconsistent, with some justices invoking state sovereignty while others reject it, leading to uncertainty about how the court will rule on Trump’s deployments.
  • The outcome of these cases may depend less on the long and changing history of 10th Amendment doctrine than on how the court views immigration enforcement, presidential authority, and the consequences of Trump’s frequent invocations of emergency power for American democracy.

Demonstrators in Portland, Ore., protest on Oct. 4, 2025, against President Donald Trump's plan to deploy the National Guard to the city. Spencer Platt/Getty Images

If you’re confused about what the law does and doesn’t allow the president to do with the National Guard, that’s understandable.

As National Guard troops landed in Portland, Oregon, in late September 2025, the state’s lawyers argued that the deployment was a “direct intrusion on its sovereign police power.”

Days before, President Donald Trump, calling the city “a war zone,” had invoked a federal law allowing the government to call up the Guard during national emergencies or when state authorities cannot maintain order.

The conflict throws into relief a question as old as the Constitution itself: Where does federal power end and state authority begin?

One answer seems to appear in the 10th Amendment’s straightforward language: “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.” This text is considered to be the constitutional “hook” for federalism in our democracy.

The founders, responding to anti-Federalist anxieties about an overbearing central government, added this language to emphasize that the new government possessed only limited powers. Everything else – including the broad “police power” to regulate health, safety, morals and general welfare – remained with the states.

Yet from the beginning, the text has generated plenty of confusion. Is the 10th Amendment merely a “truism,” as Justice Harlan Fiske Stone wrote in 1941 in United States v. Darby, restating the Constitution’s structure of limited powers? Or does it describe concrete powers held by the states?

Turns out, there’s no simple answer, not even from the nation’s highest court. Over the years, the Supreme Court has treated the 10th Amendment like the proverbial magician’s hat, sometimes pulling robust state powers from its depths, other times finding it empty.

The roofline with carvings on it of a large, white, pillared building.

Will the Supreme Court justices weigh in on the Trump administration’s attempts to deploy the National Guard?
Win McNamee/Getty Images

10th Amendment’s broad range

The arguments over the 10th Amendment for almost 200 years have applied not only to the National Guard but to questions about how the federal and state governments share powers over everything from taxation to government salaries, law enforcement and regulation of the economy.

For much of the 19th century, the 10th Amendment remained dormant. The federal government’s weakness and limited ambitions, especially on the slavery question, meant that boundaries were rarely tested before the courts.

The New Deal era brought this equilibrium crashing down.

The Supreme Court initially resisted the expansion of federal power, striking down laws banning child labor in Hammer v. Dagenhart in 1918, setting a federal minimum wage in 1923 in Adkins v. Children’s Hospital, and offering farmers subsidies in U.S. v. Butler in 1937. All these decisions were based on the 10th Amendment.

But this resistance wore down in the face of economic crisis and political pressure. By the time of the Darby case in 1941, which concerned the Fair Labor Standards Act and Congress’ power to regulate many aspects of employment, the court had relegated the 10th Amendment to “truism” status: The Amendment, wrote Stone, did nothing more than restate the relationship between the national and state governments as it had been established by the Constitution before the amendment.

The 1970s marked an unexpected revival. In the 1976 decision in National League of Cities v. Usery, a dispute over whether Congress could directly exercise control over minimum wage and overtime pay for state and local government employees, the court held that Congress could not use its commerce power to regulate state governments.

But that principle was abandoned nine years later, with the court doubling back on its position. Now, if the states wanted protection from federal overreach, they would have to seek it through the political process, not judicial intervention.

Yet less than a decade later, the court reversed course again. The modern federalism renaissance began in the ’90s with a pair of divided opinions stating that the federal government cannot force the states to enforce federal regulatory programs: this was the “anti-commandeering principle.”

The 10th Amendment’s meandering path

In recent decades, the court, led by Chief Justice John Roberts, has invoked the amendment to protect state power in varied, even surprising contexts: states’ entitlement to federal Medicaid spending; state authority over running elections, despite patterns of voter exclusion; even legalization of sports gambling.

On the other hand, in 2024, Colorado was barred by the court from excluding Trump from the presidential ballot as part of its power to administer elections.

That brings us back to the present, where Trump has deployed National Guard troops to Los Angeles to quell protests against immigration enforcement, and bids to send them to Portland and Chicago as well.

From the point of view of federalism, two factors lend this conflict some constitutional complexity.

One is the National Guard’s dual state-federal character. Most Guard mobilizations, including disaster relief, take place under Title 32 of the U.S. Code, which maintains state control of troops with federal funding.

By contrast, Title 10 allows the president to assert federal control over Guard units in case of “a rebellion or danger of a rebellion” against the government or where “the President is unable with the regular forces to execute the laws of the United States.”

The other factor is political.

Since World War II, the National Guard has been deployed only 10 times by presidents, mostly in support of racial desegregation and the protection of civil rights. All but one of these mobilizations came at the governor’s request – the lone exception, pre-Trump, being President Dwight Eisenhower’s 1957 mobilization of the Arkansas National Guard to desegregate schools in Little Rock over the wishes of Gov. Orval Faubus.

In sharp contrast, Trump has now attempted three times to send troops to large cities over the explicit objection of Democratic governors. Such is the case in Portland.

A man with sandy hair dressed in a blue jacket, white shirt and red tie.

President Donald Trump has faced lawsuits when deploying the National Guard to states with Democratic governors.
AP Photo/Evan Vucci

National Guard deployments and constitutional stakes

Oregon’s lawsuit argues that there is no national emergency in the city, and that deploying Guard troops to the state without Gov. Tina Kotek’s consent – indeed, over her explicit objection – and absent the extraordinary circumstances that might justify Title 10 federalization, is illegal. The National Guard, asserts the lawsuit, remains a state institution that federal authorities cannot commandeer.

The two deployments, in Oregon and Illinois, are making their way through the federal courts, and the Trump administration has asked the Supreme Court to intervene to authorize the deployments. What the court will do, if the cases reach it, is uncertain. Roberts has proved willing to invoke state sovereignty in some contexts while rejecting it in others.

For now, the court has upheld several Trump administration actions while constraining others, suggesting a jurisprudence driven more by specific contexts than categorical rules.

Whether Oregon’s challenge succeeds may depend less on the long and changing history of 10th Amendment doctrine than on how the court views immigration enforcement, presidential authority and the consequences of Trump’s frequent invocations of emergency power for American democracy.

The Conversation

Andrea Katz does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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Q. What is the main legal debate surrounding President Trump’s deployment of National Guard troops to cities with Democratic governors?
A. The debate centers around whether the president has the authority to deploy the National Guard without the consent of state governors, and whether this action constitutes a “direct intrusion” on state sovereign power.

Q. What is the 10th Amendment of the US Constitution, and how does it relate to federalism in the country?
A. The 10th Amendment states that powers not delegated to the federal government by the Constitution are reserved to the states or the people. It emphasizes the principle of federalism, which limits the power of the central government.

Q. How has the Supreme Court treated the 10th Amendment over the years, and what have been some notable decisions?
A. The court has treated the 10th Amendment in a complex and inconsistent manner, with some decisions finding robust state powers and others finding it empty or a “truism.” Notable cases include National League of Cities v. Usery (1976), Darby v. United States (1941), and Colorado v. Baca (2024).

Q. What is the difference between Title 32 and Title 10 of the US Code, and how do they relate to National Guard deployments?
A. Title 32 allows state control over National Guard troops with federal funding, while Title 10 grants the president authority to assert federal control in cases of rebellion or danger.

Q. How often has the National Guard been deployed by presidents since World War II, and what have been the circumstances of these deployments?
A. The National Guard has been deployed only 10 times by presidents since World War II, mostly in support of civil rights and racial desegregation. Trump’s deployments to Portland and Chicago are notable exceptions.

Q. What is the legal basis for President Trump’s deployment of National Guard troops to cities with Democratic governors?
A. The president claims that he has invoked a federal law allowing the government to call up the Guard during national emergencies or when state authorities cannot maintain order.

Q. How have courts responded to challenges from Democratic governors and other states regarding Trump’s National Guard deployments?
A. Courts have upheld some of Trump’s actions while constraining others, suggesting a jurisprudence driven by specific contexts rather than categorical rules.

Q. What are the implications of the Supreme Court’s potential intervention in the case involving Oregon’s challenge to Trump’s deployment of National Guard troops?
A. The court’s decision may set a precedent for future cases involving presidential authority and state sovereignty, with significant implications for federalism and democracy.

Q. How has President Trump’s frequent invocation of emergency power affected his presidency and the country’s democratic institutions?
A. Trump’s repeated use of emergency powers has raised concerns about his commitment to democratic norms and the rule of law, potentially undermining trust in government and the Constitution.