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At times, Batman and the League have not seen eye to eye on how best to approach a particular threat, which has caused Batman to depart the Justice League altogether in certain instances. In others, Batman works with the Justice League while also having a somewhat more tentative relationship with his fellow heroes. Here are five instances in which Batman has left the Justice League in the comics.
1) Batman & The Outsiders

One of the first instances of Batman having a dispute with the Justice League unfolded very briefly in 1983 in Batman and the Outsiders #1, marking the Dark Knight’s founding of a new team of heroes. After Batman’s close ally Lucius Fox is kidnapped in Europe during a conflict known as the Markovian Revolution, the Caped Crusader loses patience with the “two-bit” heroes that comprise the League with him, due to the League’s insistence on honoring the United Nations request they remain out of the tense political situation. Batman resigns “effective immediately”, and forms his own team known as the Outsiders, consisting of himself, Black Lightning, Metamorpho, Katana, Geo-Force, and Halo. Ultimately, Batman patches things up with the League very quickly and rejoins, but the Dark Knight’s formation of the Outsiders is the first real demonstration on Batman’s part of his willingness to walk from the Justice League over a dispute in their methods.
2) JLA: The Obsidian Age

The Justice League has always done their best to operate with the consent of the people of Earth, but the League having to navigate government bureaucracy really gets under the Dark Knight’s skin in JLA: The Obsidian Age. The story sees the Justice League facing handcuffs imposed by the United Nations, a move pushed by the always politically connected Lex Luthor. The Justice League’s members decide to abide by the U.N.’s measures to reign them in, with the exception of Batman, who departs the Justice League over his opposition to the League operating under the control of any government body. The idea of superheroes having to answer to world governments is a thought provoking scenario to ponder, and JLA: The Obsidian Age makes crystal clear where Batman stands on that issue.











