Trump administration faces more lawsuits, legal rulings over flurry of executive actions
The Trump administration is facing more lawsuits and legal rulings over immigration and refugee policies as well as cuts to federal aid and workers.
The Trump administration is facing more lawsuits and legal rulings over immigration and refugee policies as well as cuts to federal aid and workers.
The Trump administration is facing more lawsuits and legal rulings over immigration and refugee policies as well as cuts to federal aid and workers.
The Trump administration is facing multiple lawsuits and court rulings while attempting to implement significant changes on parts of the president's agenda, bypassing congressional approval.
The White House says President Donald Trump has signed a total of 73 executive orders in his first month, prompting many of the lawsuits circulating throughout the judicial system.
The latest rulings, handed down by various federal judges, affect immigrants and refugees as well as federal aid cuts and worker layoffs.
On Thursday, a judge said the Trump administration to lift a freeze on foreign aid. The judge is demanding the administration restore aid funding but denied a request from nonprofit groups to hold the administration in contempt of court.
Another attempting to temporarily halt mass federal worker layoffs, stating that the claim should fall under federal employment law rather than district court.
Elon Musk, leading the effort at the Department of Government Efficiency, celebrated the brief win before a large crowd at the Conservative Political Action Conference on Thursday.
"The most surprising thing is the scale of the expenditures and actually how easy it is to just add some caring and competence," Musk said. "You can actually save billions of dollars."
the administration for rescinding a Biden-era expansion of Temporary Protected Status for over 600,000 Venezuelans. A similar plan from the Trump administration to revoke the legal status of half a million Haitians is also expected to face legal challenges.
A federal judge is also refusing a to force the White House to resume payments for a refugee resettlement program, affecting some 7,000 seeking protection in the U.S.