It remains unclear what legal authority President Trump would use for the deployment, when troops might arrive, or which branch of the military would be involved. The announcement reportedly caught many at the Pentagon by surprise, and the White House did not immediately provide clarifying details.
The consistent response from Oregon leaders has been to stay vigilant, but don’t overreact. Don’t provoke. Don’t engage in political violence. Don’t take the bait.
Saturday, I joined statewide elected officials and legislative leaders in a Call for Unity that said in part, “we firmly oppose any deployment of federal troops to our city and reject the negative characterization of our citizens. Recent statements by the president suggesting Portland needs federal military intervention are inaccurate and counterproductive to Portland’s recovery and success in improving public safety.”
Sunday morning we learned that the President has used his authority to activate 200 members of the Oregon National Guard to be deployed in Portland “immediately” where protests are occurring or likely to occur.
I continue to see peaceful protests at every community in our district – both opposed to and in support of the president. As always, I implore people to be peaceful, lawful, and respectful of private property.
It is also important to remember who the Oregon National Guard is. These are our neighbors and friends who signed up to support our communities, fight wildfires and floods, and defend us all. They serve under a legal obligation to obey lawful orders. Their chain of command has suddenly shifted from the state and the Governor to the federal government and the President. But they are not the enemy.
Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield has filed a preliminary injunction against the order. “In America, we don’t use our United States military on our own citizens, except in extreme circumstances,” Rayfield said. These are not extreme circumstances. Stay tuned.
Oregon considered a bill to prevent the president from deploying Oregon’s National Guard, but it failed to come up for a vote in the state Senate after passing the House. HB 3954 would have blocked the Oregon National Guard from supporting federal law or immigration enforcement except for “indirect support or surveillance duties that are part of a border security operation,” and sought to prevent the adjutant general from allowing National Guard members to be called into active service if it would leave the guard incapable of responding to statewide emergencies like wildfires.
You can view the Governor and Mayor’s press conference here. You can read the response of the Oregonian here. You can read the “Call for Unity” I signed here. |