A court says President Trump can keep control of the National Guard in Los Angeles for now.
California's governor says he should control the Guard.
What's next in this legal battle and what does it mean for other states?
I'm Leila Falded, that's Michelle Martin, and this is Up First from NPR News.
President Trump says he'll decide whether or not to bomb Iran in the next two weeks,
but that has some of his most vocal supporters asking,
what happened to Trump's promise of no more wars?
You have to think this through at this level, and the American people have to be on board.
How is the split playing out among his base?
And a diplomacy effort is underway to end the war between Iran and Israel.
EU ministers are set to hold talks with their Iranian counterparts in Geneva today.
Stay with us.
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4,000 National Guard troops in Los Angeles will remain under President Trump's control.
Yeah,
that's after a federal appeals court in California blocked a lower court's order for Trump to return control of the Guard to the state's governor,
Gavin Newsom.
It's the latest in the ongoing legal battle between California and the Trump administration over how to respond to protests in Los Angeles triggered by immigration raids in the region.
CAP Radio's Laura Fitzgerald is with us now to tell us more about all this.
Good morning, Laura.