Trump ordered D.C. National Guard levels not be lowered; Hegseth pledged to 'surge this summer'

At a White House cabinet meeting on May 27, 2026, President Donald Trump publicly directed that the number of National Guard troops deployed across Washington, D.C. not be reduced, saying "don't lower the number." Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, at the same table, responded that the administration would "surge this summer too." The exchange committed the executive branch to maintaining and expanding an ongoing federalized National Guard presence in the District, part of the administration's domestic security posture in U.S. cities.

  • Donald Trump (President of the United States)
  • Pete Hegseth (Secretary of Defense)
  • U.S. Department of Defense

"We're going to surge this summer too."

— The Guardian

At a White House cabinet meeting on May 27, 2026, President Donald Trump publicly directed that the number of National Guard troops deployed across Washington, D.C. not be lowered. Responding to a suggestion that troop levels might be reduced, Trump said to keep the troops and "don't lower the number." Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, seated at the same table, answered that the administration would "surge this summer too." The statements were made on the record in front of the assembled cabinet.

The exchange is recorded here as a distinct event because it is an on-the-record executive commitment to continue and expand a federalized National Guard deployment in the District of Columbia. The recorded concern is domestic-deployment overreach — federal armed forces maintained in a civilian-policing posture in the capital — together with the deployment of federalized Guard forces against a civilian population, the treatment of uniformed forces as an instrument of the administration's political posture, and the militarized character of the domestic security presence. Washington's distinctive federal status shapes the legal picture, since the President's authority over the D.C. National Guard differs from the authority governing Guard forces in the states.

This entry documents the May 27 cabinet-meeting statements as a single event in a longer sequence of National Guard deployments justified on crime-control and security grounds in U.S. cities. It records the stated intent to maintain and surge the deployment, not any specific subsequent troop movement, which would be a separate event if and when it occurs.

  1. Hegseth vows 'surge' of National Guard troops in Washington DC after Trump says 'don't lower the number' – liveThe Guardian primary accessed May 29, 2026