On the next throughline from NPR.
People have a real ethical and moral quandaries about this.
People are uncomfortable from the very beginning.
Listen in the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.
Live from NPR News in Washington, I'm Giles Snyder.
A federal judge in Oregon has temporarily blocked President Trump from sending National Guard troops to Portland from Oregon Public Broadcasting,
Jody Audenland reports.
President Trump has said that violent protests outside the Portland ice building left the city,
quote, war ravaged and threatened the safety of federal employees.
But Judge Karen Imurgat, a Trump appointee,
said on her ruling that protests had generally been peaceful since June,
with fewer than 20 protesters on average.
Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield celebrated the decision in a press conference and called it a healthy check on the president's power.
No president is allowed to make up facts or rely on social media trolling or posts when deploying the United States military in our cities.
The judge could extend the restraining order on October 17.
For NPR News, I'm Joni Oddenland in Portland, Oregon.
Illinois Governor JB Pritzker says he was given an ultimatum this weekend to either call up National Guard troops or the Trump administration will.
The White House says President Trump has authorized 300 Guard troops to be sent to Chicago,
where a woman was treated at a hospital and released after being shot by a Border Patrol agent.
Officials say she was armed and tried to run over immigration officers.