Wednesday, October 8, 2025 - Tension has erupted in the U.S. after hundreds of Texas National Guard soldiers arrived at an Army facility outside Chicago following President Donald Trump’s order to deploy 300 troops to the city.
The move — which the president says is part of a wider
crackdown targeting Democrat-run cities — has sparked outrage from Illinois
leaders and protesters who describe it as a dangerous political stunt, Sky News
reported.
Illinois Governor JB Pritzker slammed Trump’s decision,
accusing him of using the National Guard as “political props and pawns.” State
attorneys also tried — but failed — to legally block the deployment, calling it
“illegal, dangerous, and unconstitutional.”
Images from the scene showed military personnel wearing the
Texas National Guard patch on their uniforms as they arrived at the U.S. Army
Reserve Centre in Elwood, southwest of Chicago.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott confirmed the deployment, writing
on X: “The elite Texas National Guard are on the ground and ready to go. They
are putting America first by ensuring the federal government can safely enforce
federal law.”
The operation comes amid a wider immigration crackdown led
by armed Border Patrol agents in predominantly Latino communities — a move that
has triggered nationwide protests.
Local officials say they were not informed before the troops
arrived. “This is an aggressive overreach. Our federal government moving armed
troops into our community should be alarming to everyone,” said Will County
Executive Jennifer Bertino-Tarrant.
While National Guard troops usually report to state
governors and assist during emergencies, Trump has repeatedly hinted at
invoking the Insurrection Act — a rarely used law that allows presidents to
send active-duty troops into states defying federal orders.
This development follows a string of controversial posts by
Trump, including an AI-generated image depicting himself as a military officer
in Apocalypse Now, captioned: “I love the smell of
deportations in the morning.”
Protests have continued to grow across Chicago, as critics
warn that Trump’s latest move could deepen political divides and escalate
tensions between the federal government and Democratic-led states.
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