Supreme Court Hands Trump Major Victory In Foreign Aid Fight

The U.S. Supreme Court will allow the federal government to freeze more than $4 billion in foreign aid payments that President Trump tried to cancel last month using a rare โ€œpocket rescission.โ€

The justices voted 6-3 to grant the Trump administrationโ€™s emergency appeal, which stopped a lower courtโ€™s order to release the funds that had already been set aside.

A spokesperson for the White House Office of Management and Budget said, โ€œThis is a huge win for restoring the Presidentโ€™s power to carry out his policies. Left-wing groups can no longer take over the presidentโ€™s agenda.โ€

Most of the justices agreed that โ€œthe harms to the Executiveโ€™s conduct of foreign affairs appear to outweigh the potential harm faced by respondents.โ€ The Post said that the AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition, Journalism Development Network, Center for Victims of Torture, and Global Health Council are some of them.

The Supreme Courtโ€™s decision didnโ€™t answer the bigger question of whether President Trump has the power to โ€œimpoundโ€ money that Congress has approved on his own.

Trump recently told House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) that he was going to cancel more than $4 billion in foreign aid. This included $3.2 billion in programs run by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), $322 million from the joint USAIDโ€“State Department Democracy Fund, and $521 million in State Department contributions to international organizations.

The request, called a โ€œpocket rescission,โ€ was sent to Congress so close to the end of the fiscal year on September 30 that it would automatically go into effect, no matter what Congress did.

It is the first time in almost fifty years that a president has done this.

The funding in question had been designated for nonprofit organizations currently suing the Trump administration, as well as for foreign governments.

A U.S. District Judge named Amit Mehta Ali, who was appointed by Biden, said earlier this month that the administration could not keep the money without Congressโ€™s approval of the proposal to cancel it.

Ali wrote, โ€œSo far, Congress has not responded to the Presidentโ€™s proposal to rescind the funds.โ€ โ€œAnd the [Impoundment Control Act] makes it clear that it is congressional action, not the President sending a special message, that ends the previous appropriations.โ€

The nonprofit groups that are fighting the Trump administrationโ€™s funding freeze said that the pocket rescission broke federal law and put important, life-saving programs abroad at risk.

Justices Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor, and Ketanji Brown Jackson disagreed with the majority ruling on Friday.

Earlier this week, the Supreme Court agreed to hear a case on Monday that will decide whether President Donald Trump can fire members of the Federal Trade Commission without cause. This case could change the definition of presidential power and the independence of federal agencies.

The justices said in a short order that Trump could fire FTC Commissioner Rebecca Kelly Slaughter while the case is still going on. The stay that lets her go will stay in place until the court makes a decision, which is set for December.

The case asks if laws that protect FTC commissioners from being fired violate the separation of powers and if the courtโ€™s 1935 decision to uphold those protections should be changed. It will also look into whether lower federal courts can stop removals, like they did when Trump fired Democratic appointees.

Justices Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor, and Ketanji Brown Jackson, who are on the left side of the high court, disagreed. Kagan wrote that the order effectively gives the president โ€œfull controlโ€ over independent agencies that Congress wanted to keep out of politics.

โ€œHe can now fire any member he wants, for any reason or no reason at all,โ€ says the majority, even though Congress said otherwise. She wrote, โ€œAnd he may do this to end the agenciesโ€™ independence and bipartisanship.โ€

Ilhan Omar Clinches Fourth Term In Minnesota

Democratic Rep. Ilhan Oma has won Minnesotaโ€™s 5th District, staving off a challenge from Republican Dalia Al-Aqidi, a former journalist, to earn a fourth term on Capitol Hill.

As a member of the socialist โ€œSquad,โ€ Omar is one of the most well-known and controversial liberal lawmakers in the Capitol. She often gets into arguments with peers from both parties over the touchy issue of relations between Israel and Palestine.

People who donโ€™t like Omarโ€™s harsh comments about Israelโ€™s human rights record have called her antisemitic. Her vile comments led to House Republicans voting to remove her from the Foreign Affairs Committee.

The debate over this issue has grown stronger since Hamasโ€™s attacks on Israel last year. Al-Aqidi, an Iraqi Muslim who supports Israel, made it a core part of her campaign, saying that Omar was dividing people in the diverse 5th District and spreading hate against American Jews.

After the murder of unarmed Black man George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer in 2020, there has been a lot of heated conversation about how to change the police force. After the tragedy, Omar became a strong voice for liberals who want to change local police departments by, for example, cutting their budgets and giving the money to other community projects.

Al-Aqidi took issue with that and accused Omar of being dishonest when she called for cutting funding to the police but used campaign money to pay for her own safety.

Former President Donald Trump easily defeated Vice President Kamala Harris in the presidential race.

Republicans not only maintained control of the U.S. House, they also flipped the Senate.

For the first time in years, Republicans now have total control in Washington.

About ๐’›๐‘’๐’‚๐‘˜ 369

View all posts by ๐’›๐‘’๐’‚๐‘˜ 369 →

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *