Maryland Democratic Sen. Chris Van Hollen has introduced legislation that would strip the president of unilateral authority over the District of Columbia National Guard, a move spurred by ongoing legal battles between city officials and the Trump administration.
The measure, S.2688, titled the โDistrict of Columbia National Guard Home Rule Act,โ was introduced with 11 Democratic cosponsors, including Democratic Sens. Cory Booker (N.J.), Bernie Sanders (Minn.), Angela Alsobrooks (Md.), and Tammy Baldwin (Wis.). The bill would give the mayor of Washington, D.C., the same authority over the Guard that governors exercise in the states โ from responding to natural disasters and civil disturbances to overseeing administration and personnel.
The legislation rewrites portions of an 1889 law that placed the Guard under the presidentโs command. It substitutes the words โMayor of the District of Columbiaโ for โPresident of the United Statesโ throughout the statute, including sections on officer appointments, calls to duty, retirements, and court-martial authority.
The bill comes as the District has filed a lawsuit against Trumpโs deployment of more than 1,000 Guard troops across the city. Attorney General Brian Schwalb said the surge โessentially amounts to an involuntary military occupation,โ and his filing contends the president violated the 1973 Home Rule Act by acting without the mayorโs consent.
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A federal judge in California recently ruled Trumpโs earlier use of the Guard in Los Angeles unlawful, though the ruling does not directly apply to Washington, where federal control remains stronger.
Trump has vowed to expand federal interventions to other Democrat-led cities such as Chicago and Baltimore.
Members of the D.C. National Guard have had their orders extended through December, which Van Hollen said raises fears that the deployment would continue indefinitely despite local opposition.
Supporters of Van Hollenโs bill argue it would prevent presidents from weaponizing the Guard for political gain and place decision-making where it belongs, which the senator said is in the hands of local leadership.
The supporters note that the Districtโs lack of authority has been highlighted repeatedly, including during the Jan. 6 insurrection, when Guard mobilization was delayed by federal approval requirements.
The White House has not commented on the lawsuit, and the bill now awaits consideration in the Senate Armed Services Committee.
District residents โdeserve the same protections and autonomy as every other American city,โ Schwalb said, emphasizing that unchecked presidential power over local forces โis both unlawful and dangerous.โ

