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Home Potential threat to numerous court orders against the Trump administration due to recent high court decision regarding injunctions
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Potential threat to numerous court orders against the Trump administration due to recent high court decision regarding injunctions

    High court ruling on injunctions could imperil many court orders blocking the Trump administration
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    WASHINGTON – The recent ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court restricting federal judges from granting nationwide injunctions could have a significant impact on various legal battles that have resulted in court orders halting policies implemented by the Trump administration.

    Since the beginning of the current administration until mid-May, around 40 nationwide injunctions were issued by judges against the White House on a range of issues such as federal funding, election regulations, and matters related to diversity and equality. Legal experts involved in some of these lawsuits are determined to continue their efforts, as the Supreme Court’s decision has indicated alternative legal avenues that could have widespread national consequences.

    Here’s a look at some of the decisions that could be impacted:

    Birthright citizenship

    Several federal judges have used nationwide injunctions to block President Donald Trump’s directive that denies citizenship to children born in the U.S. to parents who are either residing in the country unlawfully or on a temporary basis. The Supreme Court’s recent judgment, however, specifically pertained to a lawsuit concerning this directive, leaving ambiguity on whether the limitations on birthright citizenship could soon be enforced partially in certain regions of the country.

    Opponents went back to court within hours of the opinion, using a legal path the court left open to file class-action lawsuits that could have nationwide effect.

    Election rules

    On June 13, U.S. District Judge Denise J. Casper in Massachusetts blocked Trump’s attempt to overhaul elections in the U.S. An executive order the Republican president issued in March sought to compel officials to require documentary proof of citizenship for everyone registering to vote for federal elections, accept only mailed ballots received by Election Day and condition federal election grant funding on states adhering to the new ballot deadline.

    California was one of the plaintiffs in that suit. The office of the state’s attorney general Rob Bonta said in an email it was assessing the effect of Friday’s Supreme Court decision on all of the state’s litigation.

    Legal aid for migrants

    A federal judge in California in April blocked the administration from cutting off funding for legal representation for unaccompanied migrant children. The administration has appealed.

    U.S. District Judge Araceli Martinez-Olguin in San Francisco said there was “no practical way” to limit the scope of the injunction by party or by geography.

    “Indeed, as discussed with the Government’s declarants at the preliminary injunction hearing, there exists only one contract for the provision of the subject funding, and it applies to direct legal services nationwide,” Martinez-Olguin wrote.

    Plaintiffs’ attorney Adina Appelbaum, program director for the Amica Center for Immigrant Rights, said she didn’t think the Supreme Court’s decision would significantly affect her case.

    But she blasted it, saying the high court had “turned its back on its role to protect the people,” including immigrants.

    Diversity, equity and inclusion

    A federal judge in February largely blocked sweeping executive orders that sought to to end government support for programs promoting diversity, equity and inclusion.

    U.S. District Judge Adam Abelson in Baltimore granted a preliminary injunction preventing the administration from terminating or changing federal contracts it considers equity-related.

    An appeals court later put the decision on hold. Attorneys for the group Democracy Forward represented plaintiffs in the case.

    The group’s president and CEO, Skye Perryman, said she was disappointed by the Supreme Court’s ruling, calling it another barrier to seeking relief in court. But she also said it was limited and could keep at least some decisions blocking the Trump administration in place.

    Transgender care

    A federal judge in February stopped the administration from withholding federal funds from health care facilities that provide gender-affirming care to patients under the age of 19.

    Explaining his reasoning for a nationwide injunction, U.S. District Judge Brendan Abell Hurson in Maryland said a “piecemeal approach is not appropriate in this case.”

    “Significant confusion would result from preventing agencies from conditioning funding on certain medical institutions, while allowing conditional funding to persist as to other medical institutions,” he wrote.

    An appeal in the case was on hold as the Supreme Court considered similar issues about minors and transgender health care. The high court last week upheld a Tennessee law banning key health care treatments for transgender youth.

    Omar Gonzalez-Pagan, senior counsel for the Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund Inc., was one of the attorneys who secured Hurson’s ruling. He said the plaintiffs’ lawyers were still evaluating the possible impact of the Supreme Court’s decision, but he believed the high court recognized that “systematic, universal relief is sometimes appropriate.”

    Federal cuts

    In May, a judge in Rhode Island blocked an executive order that sought to dismantle federal agencies supporting libraries, museums, minority businesses and parties in labor disputes.

    The administration has appealed.

    Rhode Island was a plaintiff in the lawsuit. The state’s attorney general, Peter F. Neronha, said in a statement Friday he would “continue to pull every available legal lever to ensure that Americans, all Americans, are protected from the progressively dangerous whims of this President.”

    ___

    Thanawala reported from Atlanta. Associated Press writers Alanna Durkin Richer, Lindsay Whitehurst, Christina Cassidy in Atlanta and Rebecca Boone in Boise, Idaho contributed to this report.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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