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US Judge says Trump Administration violated order to lift spending freeze

A U.S. Judge on Monday said that President Donald Trump’s administration had violated an order of the court

Lifting a wide freeze

U.S. district judge John McConnell of Providence, Rhode Island had already blocked funding with a temporary restraint order on January 31, but a number of Democratic state attorneys who sued to stop the move

Last week

The government is still holding back funds.

This ruling appears to be the first time a judge has found that the Trump administration violated an order from a court halting a new policy. On Monday, the Trump administration announced that it would appeal.

McConnell stated on Monday that the broad categorical freeze of federal funding is likely unconstitutional, and it has caused irreparable damage to a large portion of the country. "These pauses of funding violate the plain language of the TRO."

McConnell stated that all funding should be restored, at least until McConnell can hold an hearing on the motion of the states for a more long-term order.

A lawyer from the office of Democratic New York attorney general Letitia James informed McConnell on Feb. 6 that state agencies still had difficulty accessing federal funding, including billions for infrastructure projects funded under the Inflation Reduction Act.

The Trump administration told the states that it did not believe the order applied to certain infrastructure and environmental spending and that payments were being delayed due to "operational and adminstrative reasons."

McConnell, however, said that his order was "clear and unequivocal" when it came to the funding frozen as a result of Trump's executive orders.

Originally, the states sued the White House over a memo from the Office of Management and Budget that announced a broad freeze on federal spending. OMB quickly rescinded the memo shortly after the lawsuit.

The memo is part of an effort by the Trump administration to reduce federal spending and reform the federal bureaucracy. This has led to a spate of lawsuits.

Federal employee unions accuse the Trump administration in a separate case of violating an order by a court to reinstate USAID employees who had been placed on administrative leave. Reporting by Brendan Pierson, New York. Editing by Mark Porter and Alexia Garamfalvi.

(source: Reuters)