Vance advocated for deploying the military on American streets to dismantle protests in Minnesota following the fatal shooting of demonstrator Alex Pretti by federal agents. He framed the move as a necessity to crush unrest, baselessly labeling activists as paid agitators. However, the proposal met resistance from within. Attorney Will Scharf argued that the Insurrection Act is reserved for armed rebellions, not civilian dissent. During a tense meeting, former Deputy Chief of Staff James Blair dismantled the plan by questioning its tactical value and public relations fallout, leaving the room silent.
Simultaneously, Stephen Miller pressured the administration to suspend the writ of habeas corpus to facilitate mass deportations without judicial interference. Scharf again intervened, citing long-standing legal precedent that such a suspension requires an act of Congress and must include procedural safeguards. Legal experts suggest the administration’s retreat from these plans was driven less by constitutional reverence and more by the fear of public backlash. As University of Michigan law professor Leah Litman observed, the episode demonstrates that intense public outcry remains a potent check on executive overreach.

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