Trump deploys additional 2,000 National Guard troops to Los Angeles

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A man faces members of security forces outside the Edward R. Roybal Federal building after days of protests against federal immigration sweeps and the deployment of the California National Guard and U.S. Marines, in downtown Los Angeles, California, U.S., June 10, 2025.

David Ryder | Reuters

President Donald Trump's administration is ordering an additional 2,000 members of the California Army National Guard to the Los Angeles area under federal command, the Pentagon announced late Tuesday.

The deployment of additional soldiers was ordered despite the fact that demonstrations against federal immigration enforcement raids across the city have largely dissipated.

A spokesperson for the Los Angeles Police Department told CNBC Wednesday that there had not been any arrests related to protests in the city since Saturday night.

Mayor Karen Bass lifted the city's nighttime curfew on Tuesday.

The latest deployment brings the total number of federal troops currently deployed to the L.A. area to 4,800. Of these, 700 are U.S. Marines and 4,100 are California Army National Guard.

The troops will "support the protection of federal functions, personnel, and property in the greater Los Angeles area," U.S. Northern Command said in statement.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth defended the actions of federal troops deployed to L.A. at a Senate hearing Wednesday in Washington.

Hegseth said that the marines and National Guard troops deployed to LA have "conducted themselves with the utmost of professionalism, defending our federal agents," during a hearing before the Armed Services Committee.

U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth speaks during a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., June 18, 2025.

Annabelle Gordon | Reuters

Asked whether he would follow a court order that said the deployment of troops to U.S. cities was illegal, Hegseth replied: "I don't believe district courts should be determining national security policy."

"If the Supreme Court rules on a topic, we will abide by that," he said later in the hearing.

He also defended the administration's activation of troops to LA, saying that Trump "had all the authorities, and the Defense Department happily supported, defending our ICE agents in the conduct of their job."

He did not answer when asked numerous times by Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., whether he would support the decision to deploy troops to additional U.S. cities.

"It's a complete hypothetical lacking any context at all," he said to Warren.

In an unprecedented show of force, the Trump administration earlier this month deployed thousands of National Guard troops and hundreds of Marines to quell escalating clashes between demonstrators and law enforcement in the Los Angeles area.

The deployments drew sharp backlash from California Gov. Gavin Newsom and other state Democratic leaders, who did not request the troops, which is a step that normally precedes the federal deployment of forces.

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The deployments have also triggered a battle in the courts between the state of California and the Trump White House. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals heard arguments Tuesday about the legality of the federal government's move and appeared inclined to side with Trump in the ongoing feud, POLITICO reports.

The latest troop deployment comes as the protests, which drew demonstrators opposing the Trump administration's federal immigration enforcement actions, have started to wind down.

"The curfew, coupled with ongoing crime prevention efforts, have been largely successful in protecting stores, restaurants, businesses and residential communities from bad actors who do not care about the immigrant community," Los Angeles Mayor Bass said in a news release on Tuesday.

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