The Trump administration is considering ways to invoke emergency powers, including utilising the Insurrection Act of 1807, which would allow president Donald Trump to deploy troops on US soil in the event of major unrest.
Despite legal pushback, vice-president JD Vance has confirmed the White is seriously considering the idea. âThe presidentâs looking at all of his options,â he told NBCâs Newsâs Meet the Press on Sunday, adding that âwe are talking about this because crime has gotten out of control in our citiesâ.
The acknowledgment came as president Trump boarded a plane for Jerusalem, where he is scheduled to speak at the Knesset and meet families of hostages set to be released from Gaza on Monday after helping to broker a major peace deal.
The war, he proclaimed, âwas overâ, adding that relations in the Middle East would ânormalizeâ.
Here are the key stories:
The White House is talking about invoking the Insurrection Act that would allow the deployment of military troops on US soil to quell domestic unrest amid legal challenges over the moves, JD Vance confirmed on Sunday.
Vance was asked on NBC Newsâs Meet the Press whether Donald Trump was seriously considering invoking the emergency power to deploy national guard forces and even the US military in domestic settings.
The war in Gaza has ended and the Middle East is going to ânormalizeâ, Donald Trump said on Sunday as he flew to Israel, which was waiting for Hamas to release Israeli hostages as world leaders were gathering to discuss the next steps toward peace.
âThe war is over, you understand that,â Trump told reporters onboard Air Force One as he began a flight from Washington DC to Israel.
Beijing has told the US it will retaliate if Donald Trump fails to back down on his threat to impose 100% tariffs on Chinese imports as investors brace for another bout of trade war turmoil.
Chinaâs commerce ministry blamed Washington for raising trade tensions between the two countries after Trump announced on Friday that he would impose the additional tariffs on Chinaâs exports to the US, along with new controls on critical software, by 1 November.
Officials in the Trump administration are reportedly weighing the possibility of selling portions of the federal governmentâs $1.6tn student loan portfolio to private investors, which experts say could carry risks for both taxpayers and borrowers â potentially reshaping the student loan landscape in unpredictable ways.
Donald Trump is not known for taking advice, especially from foreign leaders who often seek to flatter and compliment the US president, writes the Guardianâs Jason Wilson in this feature on the El Salvadorian leaderâs thoughts on the US judiciary.
El Salvadorâs authoritarian leader Nayib Bukele has followed a different tack, he writes, by calling on the Trump administration to follow his example in impeaching âcorrupt judgesâ.
Catching up? Hereâs what happened on 11 October, 2025.