The Trump administration knowledgeable a federal appeals courtroom on Tuesday night that it has returned to the Supreme Court docket, in search of to pause an order by a federal district courtroom in Washington, D.C., that requires the federal authorities to pay billions of {dollars} in overseas assist that Congress has already allotted. In a 36-page submitting hooked up to a letter submitted to the U.S. Court docket of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, U.S. Solicitor Basic D. John Sauer instructed the courtroom that except it steps in, “it is going to successfully power the federal government to quickly obligate some $12 billion in foreign-aid funds that will expire September 30 and to proceed obligating tens of billions of {dollars} extra—overriding the Govt Department’s foreign-policy judgments relating to whether or not to pursue rescissions and thwarting interbranch dialogue.”
The dispute stems from a Jan. 20 government order signed by President Donald Trump. That order instructed federal companies to “instantly pause new obligations and disbursements of improvement help funds to overseas international locations and implementing non-governmental organizations” in order to provide the federal government time to overview the applications to make sure that they had been according to U.S. overseas coverage goals. Secretary of State Marco Rubio then issued a memorandum freezing foreign-aid applications funded by the State Division and the U.S. Company for Worldwide Growth.
The challengers within the case are teams which have acquired (or whose members have acquired) overseas assist funds. They filed lawsuits within the U.S. District Court docket for the District of Columbia, in search of to bar the federal authorities from implementing the chief order.
After U.S. District Decide Amir Ali issued an order on Feb. 25 directing the State Division and USAID to pay contractors and grant recipients inside 36 hours for work that had already been executed, the Trump administration got here to the Supreme Court docket, asking the justices to intervene.
On March 5, a divided courtroom in the end declined to take action, observing that the deadline to adjust to Ali’s order had already handed. in a quick unsigned opinion, the courtroom as a substitute instructed Ali to “make clear what obligations the Authorities should fulfill to make sure compliance” with the short-term restraining order that Ali had entered within the case.
When the case returned to the district courtroom, Ali concluded (amongst different issues) that the Trump administration had seemingly violated each federal regulation and the Structure when it canceled funds that Congress had earmarked for overseas assist. Ali barred the federal government “from unlawfully impounding congressionally appropriated overseas assist funds” and directed the federal government to “make out there for obligation the complete quantity of funds that Congress” had allotted.
The U.S. Court docket of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit fast-tracked the federal government’s enchantment, and a three-judge panel of that courtroom lifted Ali’s order. That prompted the challengers to go to the complete courtroom of appeals, which has not but acted on their request to reinstate Ali’s order or the federal government’s request to situation the mandate (which might permit the panel’s ruling to enter impact). Consequently, Ali’s order stays in place for now.
In his submitting on Tuesday evening, Sauer contended that the district courtroom had “put in itself as supervisor-in-chief of additional spending and recissions proposals, issuing a preliminary injunction ordering the federal government to make out there for obligation tens of billions of {dollars} in appropriated overseas assist funds and to spend many billions of {dollars} by September 30, earlier than these appropriations expire.”
In doing so, Sauer wrote, “the district courtroom ha[d] issued a blueprint for just about any potential recipient of federal funds to avoid the” procedures created by Congress “and enlist district courts to preempt and thwart negotiations between the political branches over the expenditure of appropriated funds.”
Sauer requested the courtroom to maneuver shortly on the federal government’s request, with both a ruling or an administrative keep – which might put Ali’s order on maintain to provide the courtroom extra time to rule on the request – by Sept. 2.
Posted in Emergency appeals and functions, Featured
Circumstances: Division of State v. AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition
Advisable Quotation:
Amy Howe,
Trump administration returns to Supreme Court docket in dispute over foreign-aid cost,
SCOTUSblog (Aug. 26, 2025, 9:15 PM),
https://www.scotusblog.com/2025/08/trump-administration-returns-to-supreme-court-in-dispute-over-foreign-aid-payment/




















