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Trump administration says it cannot meet court deadline for foreign aid payments

Feb 27, 2025

Washington [US], February 27: President Donald Trump's administration said in a court filing late Tuesday night that it "cannot" meet a federal judge's 11:59 p.m.
Wednesday deadline for releasing frozen funds to foreign aid contractors and grant recipients, potentially setting the stage for it to openly disobey the order.
The claim came as the administration appealed the order from U.S. District Judge Amir Ali in Washington to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. The administration asked the appeals court to put Ali's order on hold, opens new tab so it can consider the appeal.
Ali issued the temporary restraining order in response to lawsuits by foreign aid contractors and grant recipients, some of which have said they will have to shut down within days if they are not paid.
Temporary restraining orders are meant to prevent irreparable harm while a judge considers the merits of a lawsuit.
Both Ali and a Rhode Island judge overseeing a separate case over a broader federal payment freeze have already castigated the Trump administration for failing to follow their orders.
So far, however, the administration has maintained that it was trying in good faith to interpret and comply with the orders.
That could change if Ali's restraining order remains in place and the administration does not make the payments before midnight.
In that case, the administration would be openly admitting that it is not obeying a court order.
In support of its request to stay Ali's order, the administration submitted a declaration from Pete Marocco, opens new tab, who is currently acting as deputy administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development and director of foreign assistance at the State Department, saying that the required payments would take "multiple weeks."
The delay is due largely to new processes put in place by the Trump administration to ensure that payments are legitimate and comply with the administration's policy goals, according to Marocco's declaration. Ali had already ruled that those were not valid grounds to delay payments.
Source: Fijian Broadcasting Corporation

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