President Donald Trump Administration has returned to court push for federal funding freeze

Washington – A planned Trump administration freeze on federal funding is going back to the Washington Court Room on Monday.

A judge is expected to consider expanding his temporary block on President Donald Trump’s plan to prevent federal grant and loan, which targets a wide range of total funding of potential trillion dollars. .

US District Judge Lauren L. in Washington. Elkhan had discontinued the funding freeze before it was effective. A memo was designed for a broad federal funding stagnation, but later Trump’s Republican administration says that a funding freeze is still in line with the blitz of their executive orders.

They have included Trump’s efforts to increase fossil fuel production, remove security for transgender people and end diversity, equity and inclusive efforts.

In the Road Island, another judge issued a temporary order on Friday, in which the administration was stopped from stopping any federal funds. The order came into a separate case filed by about two dozen democratic states.

The Washington lawsuit, meanwhile, was filed by non -profit groups that stand to lose federal money.

A group that helps the elderly and people with disabilities in West Virginia said that it lost the federal grant to promise funds last week that makes the most of its budget. The services of the group include to help intellectual disabled people to live on their own and provide necessary transport to elderly people, such as an 86 -year -old woman who requires dialysis.

If the funding freeze is not stopped, the group will be closed and those who work it would be helpless, the group, which was not publicly nominated, was written in court documents. It said that it can help people to be homeless nursing homes or group homes or even homeless.

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The Trump administration said that a brief stagnation would suit the federal law and the court lacks constitutional rights to block it. The administration had said that it would not affect payment to individuals like Medicare, Social Security or Medicade.

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