A federal judge in Rhode Island extended his order Thursday barring the government from freezing federal funding to a coalition of states and D.C., saying the Trump administration had undermined the separation of powers.
President Donald Trump's administration suffered another legal blow in its efforts to freeze federal funding for programs that do not align with the Republican's agenda on Thursday when a second judge blocked it from implementing a sweeping pause on spending on grants,
BOSTON (AP) — A second federal judge on Thursday extended a block barring the Trump administration from freezing grants and loans potentially totaling trillions of dollars.
Another legal fight is emerging over the Trump administration’s chaotic freeze of federal funding for government grants and loans, this time over billions of dollars earmarked to fight homelessness.
The Department of Justice persuaded a federal court to trim a suit from a blind FBI worker claiming the agency’s technology is unlawfully inaccessible to him.
Judge John J. McConnell Jr. granted 23 states, including Rhode Island and Massachusetts, a preliminary injunction, ordering the Trump administration to allow federal funding appropriated by Congress to flow.
Judge John McConnell granted the request for a preliminary injunction from nearly two dozen Democratic states.
Justice Barrett sided with Chief Justice Roberts and the Supreme Court's liberal block in rejecting Trump's request to keep foreign aid frozen, provoking ire from conservatives. The post ‘Amy Coney Barrett was a mistake’: Conservatives and MAGA influencers fume over Trump-appointed justice siding against president on foreign funding freeze first appeared on Law & Crime.
A federal judge issued a long-term block on the Trump administration’s plan to freeze grants, loans and other payments, extending a temporary order and criticizing US officials for actions that were “irrational,
After a federal judge in Washington temporarily blocked the Trump administration from freezing federal grants and loans, many disability rights organizations wonder what's next.
A federal judge on Tuesday continued to block a sweeping freeze on federal funding, a key move of the Trump administration as it reviews government spending to ensure it aligns with his policies.
U.S. District Judge Loren Alikhan sided with a group of nonprofit organizations, saying that a freeze on federal assistance "may be crossing a constitutional line."