In a dramatic legal twist, former President Donald Trump scored a temporary victory Friday morning when a federal appeals court ruled in his favor, allowing National Guard troops to remain deployed in Los Angeles despite a prior court order mandating their removal. The ruling comes just days after California Governor Gavin Newsom successfully sued the Trump administration, arguing the deployment was unconstitutional and escalated tensions during ongoing protests.
Newsom’s win in federal court on Thursday was seen as a swift and significant check on federal authority, with U.S. District Judge Carla Henley ordering the immediate withdrawal of all National Guard units from Los Angeles by midnight. The ruling was hailed by civil rights groups and state officials, who argued that the presence of troops was inflaming unrest and undermining local leadership.
But the victory was short-lived. Early Friday, a three-judge panel on the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals issued an emergency stay, effectively pausing the lower court’s order and permitting the continued presence of National Guard troops—at least for now. The panel scheduled a hearing for Tuesday, signaling that a more permanent ruling is forthcoming.
The legal tug-of-war sets up a high-stakes confrontation between state and federal authority as tensions mount across Southern California. With protests still underway and political tempers flaring, Tuesday’s hearing could shape the limits of federal deployment powers during moments of domestic unrest.