January 28, 2026
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CBO Says Trump’s Domestic Guard Deployments Could Hit $1.1 Billion in 2026

The Congressional Budget Office projects President Trump’s unprecedented domestic use of the National Guard will cost about $1.1 billion in 2026 if current deployments continue, driven largely by a 2,690‑plus‑member force in Washington, D.C. that alone could total $660 million this year. In a report requested by 11 senators led by Oregon Democrat Jeff Merkley, CBO estimates the remaining deployments in D.C., Memphis and New Orleans, plus 200 Texas Guard troops on standby, are burning roughly $93 million a month after similar operations in Los Angeles, Chicago and Portland were wound down. The office says domestic Guard mobilizations cost about $496 million in 2025, while overall defense spending is poised to exceed $1 trillion under Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Budget watchdogs interviewed by NPR argue it would be more cost‑effective to invest in local law enforcement, noting Guard units cannot perform routine arrests or searches, and question using federalized troops as a long‑term crime‑control tool. The White House declined comment, continuing months of silence about the deployments’ total price tag even as Guard members themselves have used encrypted chats to question the missions’ legality, duration and impact on morale.

National Guard Deployments Federal Budget and Spending Donald Trump

📌 Key Facts

  • CBO projects Trump’s current domestic National Guard deployments will cost about $1.1 billion in 2026 if maintained at present levels.
  • The D.C. operation, with more than 2,690 Guard members, is expected to cost up to $660 million this year; all remaining deployments together require about $93 million per month.
  • CBO estimates domestic Guard mobilizations cost $496 million in 2025, as Trump sent troops to six Democratic‑led cities plus Texas standby forces.
  • The projection was released Jan. 28, 2026, in response to an October request from 11 U.S. senators led by Sen. Jeff Merkley.
  • Policy analyst Gabe Murphy of Taxpayers for Common Sense says using federalized Guard units for crime control is not cost‑effective because they lack law‑enforcement authority and do not provide a long‑term solution.

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