Judge Blocks Trump’s Federal Aid Freeze

A judge in Rhode Island said no federal law would authorize Trump’s action.
Judge Blocks Trump’s Federal Aid Freeze
President Donald Trump signs executive orders in the Oval Office at the White House on Jan. 30, 2025. Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters
Sam Dorman
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A federal judge in Rhode Island issued a temporary restraining order on Jan. 31 preventing the Trump administration from freezing federal financial assistance.

“The Executive’s action unilaterally suspends the payment of federal funds to the States and others simply by choosing to do so, no matter the authorizing or appropriating statute, the regulatory regime, or the terms of the grant itself,” Judge John J. McConnell wrote.

“The Executive cites no legal authority allowing it to do so; indeed, no federal law would authorize the Executive’s unilateral action here.”

McConnell said the restraining order is in effect until further order from the court.

The order followed a lawsuit from a long list of states and the District of Columbia targeting a directive issued on Jan. 27 from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).

In the directive, OMB Acting Director Matthew Vaeth told federal agencies that they should implement various executive orders from Trump by temporarily pausing “all activities related to obligation or disbursement of all Federal financial assistance.”

A federal judge in Washington issued a temporary block on the order the following day. OMB then rescinded the memo on Jan. 29, but McConnell said the rescission was “in name only and may have been issued simply to defeat the jurisdiction of the courts.”

“The substantive effect of the directive carries on,” he said.

He pointed to a social media post in which White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said that Trump’s executive orders “on federal funding remain in full force and effect.”

The Department of Justice had tried to argue in a Jan. 29 filing that the rescission rendered the states’ claims moot.

McConnell said the states were likely to succeed in their lawsuit and that President Donald Trump violated the Administrative Procedures Act by imposing conditions on funding that Congress instructed the executive to provide to them.

“Congress has not given the Executive limitless power to broadly and indefinitely pause all funds that it has expressly directed to specific recipients and purposes and therefore the Executive’s actions violate the separation of powers,” McConnell said.

Sam Dorman
Sam Dorman
Washington Correspondent
Sam Dorman is a Washington correspondent covering courts and politics for The Epoch Times. You can follow him on X at @EpochofDorman.
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