- Chief Justice John Roberts temporarily blocked a court order requiring the Trump administration to release $2B in foreign aid.
- The Trump administration has already terminated 90% of USAID programs, crippling global nonprofit and humanitarian efforts.
- Critics argue the delay is a strategic stall, while the case tests Trump’s push to consolidate executive power.
Chief Justice John Roberts has temporarily blocked a court-imposed deadline that required the Trump administration to release $2 billion in frozen foreign aid by midnight.
This last-minute intervention underscores the administration’s aggressive approach to reshaping government spending and its broader push to consolidate executive power.
The administration’s refusal to comply with U.S. District Judge Amir Ali’s order has ignited legal tensions, as Trump’s team argues that the government cannot feasibly meet the deadline.
Acting Solicitor General Sarah Harris told the Supreme Court,
“The district court’s imminent and arbitrary deadline makes full compliance impossible.”
However, critics claim this is a strategic stall, accusing political appointees of deliberately obstructing payments.
A court filing revealed that 90% of the U.S. Agency for International Development’s (USAID) awards have been terminated, affecting nearly 5,800 programs, while 4,100 State Department grants were also scrapped.
This freeze has already paralyzed critical nonprofit and humanitarian efforts worldwide.
Legal experts suggest Roberts’ intervention is merely a procedural delay, but it gives Trump’s legal team a crucial window to argue against reinstating the funds.
As the Supreme Court reviews the case, the stakes extend beyond foreign aid, i.e. testing the limits of judicial authority against an administration known for challenging the courts.
This case may serve as a litmus test for Trump’s broader vision, which is a federal government shaped entirely in his ideological image.
Edited by Harshajit Sarmah