The Trump administration is once again threatening to invoke the Insurrection Act, a rarely used federal law that allows a president to deploy the U.S. military domestically under specific conditions. These threats come amid community resistance efforts in Minneapolis and across Minnesota, which erupted after the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) surged hundreds of masked ICE agents into the state to conduct violent raids. On January 7, 2026, one of these operations resulted in the killing of Renee Nicole Good, a 37-year-old mother who was shot in the face by ICE while watching agents as a community observer in South Minneapolis. Since then, ICE has only escalated tensions with the community by surging more agents and expanding their raids, resulting in multiple instances of life-threatening violence.
In response to the protests, Trump has publicly threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act, asserting in social media posts that state and local officials have “failed to control” what he and his allies describe as violent “agitators” targeting federal personnel. His threat echoes previous attempts to leverage the Act in other cities and states during protests.
We must understand this moment for what it is: Donald Trump is threatening to deploy active duty military to shield lawless, violent ICE operations from lawful, nonviolent community observation and accountability. If he truly acts on it, it would only serve to escalate conditions on the ground, spreading fear, suppressing dissent, and enabling rogue ICE agents to continue abducting and disappearing people from their neighborhoods with impunity.
It’s clear the Trump administration is seriously considering invoking the Insurrection Act; we would be foolish not to take this threat seriously, too. To ensure our movement is prepared, we’re offering a clear-eyed explainer of what the Insurrection Act is, how it can be abused, and the kinds of responses that may be necessary if it is invoked.