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US Judge to stop plan to send USAID workers on Leave

US Judge to stop plan to send USAID workers on Leave

The Trump administration is prohibited from dismantling the U.S. Agency for International Development by a temporary, "limited" court order.

The decision was announced by U.S. District Court Judge Carl Nichols, in Washington. Nichols, who had been nominated as a judge by President Donald Trump for his first term on the job, made the announcement at an hearing regarding a lawsuit filed by the largest U.S. Government workers' Union and a foreign service workers' association, who were suing to stop the Administration's attempts to close down the agency.

Nichols announced that the written decision would be released later on Friday. He didn't seem to be inclined to grant the other requests of the unions, such as reopening USAID buildings or restoring funding for grants and contracts.

In a letter sent on Thursday to USAID's employees, the administration said that it would keep 611 of its essential staff onboard. The agency has a global workforce totaling more than 10,000.

Karla Gilbride said that the "major reduction in force" as well as closing of offices and the forced relocation of individuals was done beyond the authority of the executive in violation of separation of powers.

Brett Shumate from the Justice Department told Nichols about 2200 USAID employees who would be placed on paid leave as part of the administration's plan. He added that 500 people had already been put on leave.

Shumate stated that "the president has determined there is fraud and corruption at USAID".

The judge stated that his order would not allow the immediate placement of these 2,200 employees on administrative leave, and it would also stop the relocation for certain humanitarian workers stationed abroad.

Trump accused USAID of fraud and corruption in a Friday post on Truth Social. He did not provide any evidence.

He said: "USAID is driving the radical left crazy, and there's nothing they can do about it because of how much money has been spent fraudulently. The corruption is at levels never seen before. "CLOSE IT DOWN!"

Trump, hours after his inauguration on January 20, ordered that all U.S. aid to foreign countries be halted in order to align it with his "America First' policy. Since then, USAID has been a mess. It distributes billions in humanitarian aid to countries around the globe.

After the executive order, the State Department issued worldwide directives to stop work. This effectively froze all foreign aid except for emergency food assistance. This brought USAID's programs that provide life-saving aid around the world to a grinding stop, a move which experts warned could lead to deaths.

Elon Musk is a businessman who is the richest person in the world and an ally of Donald Trump. He has been leading the effort to shrink federal bureaucracy.

In fiscal year 2023, the United States distributed, in part via USAID $72 billion for aid around the world. This included everything from women's healthcare in conflict zones, to access to clean drinking water, HIV/AIDS treatment, energy security, and anti-corruption efforts.

In 2024 it provided 42% of the total humanitarian aid tracked by United Nations, but that is less than 1% its budget.

(source: Reuters)