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Most Americans oppose deploying troops without external threat, poll finds

Click to play video: 'Trump faces legal pushback over plan to deploy National Guard in multiple states'
Trump faces legal pushback over plan to deploy National Guard in multiple states
U.S. President Donald Trump’s plans to deploy the military into various American cities are running into legal trouble. In the state of Oregon, a federal judge once again blocked Trump's attempt to send the National Guard to Portland. And now, Illinois state is suing the Republican leader for deploying troops to Chicago. Jackson Proskow reports on the legal pushback. – Oct 6, 2025

Some 58 per cent of Americans – including seven in 10 Democrats and half of Republicans – think the president should send armed troops only to face external threats, a sign of unease as President Donald Trump increasingly deploys National Guard troops to police American cities, a Reuters/Ipsos poll found.

The poll, which ran Friday through Tuesday, also showed the Republican president’s approval rating ticking down to 40 per cent – one percentage point lower than in a late September poll, with his rating slipping on his handling of crime and the cost of living for U.S. households.

The poll was conducted in the days after Trump told an unusual meeting of hundreds of generals and admirals summoned from around the world to Virginia that the U.S. faces an “enemy within” and as he deploys armed troops to patrol a growing number of Democratic-led cities, including Washington, D.C. and Los Angeles.

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Democratic leaders say the deployments are politically motivated and have challenged the troop movements in court. Trump on Monday threatened to invoke an 18th-century anti-insurrection law to sidestep any court rulings restricting his orders to send Guard troops into cities over the objections of local and state officials.

Some 37 per cent of poll respondents said they agreed with a statement that presidents of either political party should have the power to deploy troops into states even when state governors object, compared to 48 per cent who disagreed.

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Trump has also deployed troops along the U.S. border, arguing the country is being invaded by criminal immigrants, and has ordered troops to kill suspected drug traffickers on boats off Venezuela without due process.

Before his address to top military leaders last week, Trump warned he would fire those he didn’t like, comments Democrats criticized as an attempt to pressure the military into taking his side in political debates.

Click to play video: 'Trump says he’d invoke insurrection act ‘if it’s necessary’'
Trump says he’d invoke insurrection act ‘if it’s necessary’

AMERICANS PREFER POLITICAL NEUTRALITY FOR MILITARY

The U.S. military traditionally keeps itself far removed from political discussions, and the Reuters/Ipsos poll showed Americans prefer that approach.

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Some 83 per cent of respondents said the military “should remain politically neutral and not take a side in domestic policy debates” while 10 per cent said the armed forces should start taking sides and support the president’s domestic policy agenda. About one in five Republicans said the military should take the president’s side in political debates.

Trump’s approval rating on crime fell in the latest poll to 41 per cent from 43 per cent in a Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted Sept. 5 to 9.

Trump’s overall approval has fallen seven percentage points since a Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted in the hours following his Jan. 20 inauguration showed him with a 47 per cent approval rating.

The Reuters/Ipsos poll, conducted online, surveyed 1,154 U.S. adults nationwide and had a margin of error of three percentage points.

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