US Supreme Court opposition to Trump’s request to block foreign aid
The US Supreme Court opposed the US President’s request to block US foreign aid.
The US Supreme Court today (Wednesday) rejected US President Donald Trump’s request to block billions of dollars in Congress, according to ISNA.
Trump, who swore in January for the second time as the US president, said to reduce the federal government’s costs that it would block billions of dollars in foreign aid and the US International Development Agency.
Several non -profit groups affiliated with the budget for world health programs and other plans have complained to the government that the Trump administration’s actions have deprived Congress’s power to control government spending and violated a federal law that determines how agencies decide.
A regional judge on February 7 ordered a large part of the money to be temporarily released during the review of the case, but the plaintiffs said the government had disobeyed the order and continued to prevent the funding.
After that, the judge ordered Trump to allocate the money to the expenses by midnight on Wednesday, but the Trump administration ordered an emergency appeal to the Supreme Court just hours before the end of the deadline and asked the court to stop the order for a few days.
Five of the five Supreme Court judges opposed the request, but none of these judges were responsible for writing the sentence and signed it, CNN reported. Therefore, the verdict was issued not by the signature of one of the Supreme Court’s specific judges but by the Supreme Court’s Collection; This can reduce its validity for referrals to future files.
However, the CNN News channel reported that the court has not yet determined when the money should be released and allocated to target programs. The Supreme Court has allowed the White House to continue the conflict on more in the final courts.
“The order, which was not signed by the judges, does not in fact require the Trump administration to pay $ 5 billion in foreign aid, but simply open the way for the regional court to pay more details on contracts,” said Steve Vladak, a professor at the Georgetown University’s legal center.
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