With the White House already having militarized Washington, D.C., there’s been speculation for weeks about which American cities might be next. JD Vance tried to offer some public assurances last week, claiming the administration has no intention of imposing deployments on anyone.
As NBC News reported, the vice president, speaking at an event in Wisconsin, fielded a question from a reporter about whether governors have the ability to stop Donald Trump from deploying the National Guard to cities around the U.S. “We want governors and mayors to ask for the help,” Vance replied. “The president is not going out there forcing this on anybody.”
Asked about deploying Guard troops to Milwaukee, the vice president added, “We want to be invited into Milwaukee. … The president of the United States has said he wants to be asked, and that has been his consistent line from the very beginning.”
Five days later, that “consistent line” unraveled, and Trump said largely the opposite. NBC News reported:
Asked whether he’d be sending the National Guard into Chicago, Trump said, ‘We‘re going in.’ … ‘I didn’t say when, but we’re going in,’ he told reporters in the Oval Office.
The Windy City is apparently not the only intended target.
Trump on sending troops to Chicago: "If the governor of Illinois would call me up, I would love to do it. Now, we're going to do it anyway. We have a right to do it. And that includes Baltimore."








