Social media posts have warned President Donald Trump for more than a month that he will declare martial law on April 20th. This usually means that the military will suspend civil law while controlling civilian functions such as courts.
However, many posts appeared to blend martial law with the potential invocation of the 1807 Rebellion Act mentioned in a recent executive order.
“I learned about this executive order (Section 6-B), which I posted on March 19th when Trump summoned the Rebellion Act of 1807 and declared martial law (amount).
The story spreads beyond Reddit to Facebook posts and videos shared on Tiktok, X and threads.
Trump’s January 20 executive order declared a national emergency at the border in the southern United States, requiring his defense and homeland security secretary to submit a report on border conditions within 90 days. The report should include “recommendations regarding additional litigation necessary to obtain full operational control of the tropical border, such as whether to invoke the Rebellion Act of 1807,” the executive order said.
April 20th is the 90-day deadline.
By calling the Rebellion Act, Trump can direct federal soldiers to enforce federal laws on the borders of the southern United States. However, legal experts told Politifact it does not amount to martial law. They said Trump has not seen a clear path to legally enforcing martial law in a commonly understood way. Trump has not publicly discussed martial law on his part.
In a statement from the Political Bureau, the Department of Defense said the agency is working with the Department of Homeland Security to develop a requested report on border conditions in the South.
Politifact contacted the Department of Homeland Security and the White House and did not receive a response.
What does invoking an Insurrection Act allow?
Invoking the Rebellion Act temporarily suspends another US law that prohibits federal forces from carrying out civil law enforcement.
The President can invoke the law after determining that an “illicit obstacle, combination, or set, or rebellion” against the federal government makes it “infeasible” to “perform” U.S. law “by the usual course of judicial proceedings.” In such cases, the Rebellion Act allows the President to direct the federal forces because he believes these laws are necessary to enforce or curb the rebellion.
The Rebellion Act is widely written and does not define terms such as “rebellion” or “rebellion.” In 1827, the US Supreme Court ruled that it “belongs to the President” the authority to decide whether the situation represents an acceptable reason for invoking the Rebellion Act.
Chris Edelson, an assistant professor at the US government, said the law provides for “the limited authority for the president to use the military to respond to real emergencies — the collapse of normal operational laws when things are really falling apart.”
The law was called after a Southern governor refused to consolidate schools and four white police officers were acquitted of a roadside be-stripped black Rodney King during the 1992 Los Angeles riots.
Experts have expressed doubt that the situation at the border in the Southern United States constitutes a breakdown or obstruction of federal law that requires the purposeful use of the law.
Tong Ying, a professor at Lewis and Clark’s law school, said it’s difficult to see how immigrants enter the country and interfere with national law.
The obstruction is “like an invading army, or a riot so severe that the government has lost control,” he said.
Martial law, on the other hand, usually refers to impose military law on civilians.
Edelson said the Rebellion Act “does not allow the president to completely replace ordinary authorities with military authorities.”
Chris Mirasora, an assistant professor at the University of Houston School of Law, said military law provides less protection to people than civil law. Mirasora said US constitutional protections will not disappear if the Rebellion Act is invoked.
The yin said that the president uses the rebellion law to enforce civil law “it may look like ‘mart law’ to amateurs. But that may be what people think in general, not military government.”
Can Trump impose martial law on southern borders?
In its 1946 ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court stated that martial law “has no accurate meaning” and was not defined by the Constitution or law of Congress.
For this reason, Edelson said, “It is not clear at the federal level that the president can declare martial law at all.”
Mirasora said the constitutions of several other countries include provisions outlined when the president can declare martial law, but the US Constitution lacks such details.
Still, martial law has been declared previously. The United States imposed martial law on Hawaii for three years after Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. President Abraham Lincoln declared martial law in certain parts of the United States during the civil war. President Andrew Johnson has restored civil law.
At the time, the Supreme Court “had more or less found that martial law could only be declared in active war zones,” said Mirasora cited the Supreme Court’s 1866 ruling that martial law could not be imposed unless civil courts were open.
So, Mirasora said there is no legal or constitutional basis for Trump to declare martial law to control the southern border. This is “not a field of active hostilities, regardless of how the administration continues to talk about the cartel’s actions.”
“The situation in which the President has invoked martial law and the Supreme Court understands martial law as very narrow,” he said. “It would require active hostility towards US territory that prevents civil legal proceedings from occurring.”
Experts said Trump’s proposal on the use of military force could be one reason for martial law speculation. In October, Trump said the US “radical left-hand man” should be “dealtly handled by the National Guard, if necessary, or by the military, if really needed.”
In June 2020, during the national protests following George Floyd’s death, Trump said he would order the US troops to “settle things quickly for them” if the governor did not send the National Guard to “control the streets.”
Then there is his willingness to challenge constitutional precedents.
He is about to end his birthright citizenship through executive orders. The move was blocked by several federal judges, including those who described the order as “blatantly unconstitutional.”
In mid-March, Trump said the United States had been invaded by Venezuelan gangs, evoking the alien enemy law of 1798. The Supreme Court lifted a lower court order temporarily suspending the deportation of Venezuelan immigrants under the law. It didn’t control whether Trump’s use of law was constitutional or not.
Edelson mentioned the January 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol and the fact that around 1,500 people charged with the crime that day were forgiven.
*Caryn Baird contributed to this report. *