Aid groups ask appeals court to reject Trump's stay request
Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump waves as he departs a campaign event at Central Wisconsin Airport, Saturday, Sept. 7, 2024, in Mosinee, Wis. (AP Photo/Morry Gash)

Donald Trump waves as he departs a campaign event at Central Wisconsin Airport, Saturday, Sept. 7, 2024, in Mosinee, Wis. (AP Photo/Morry Gash).

A group of international aid organizations are asking a federal appeals court to deny the Trump administration’s request to stop a lower court’s order to release hundreds of millions of dollars in approved funding by Wednesday midnight. They argue that the appeal is just a delay tactic.

The plaintiffs argue that after ignoring the district court’s order for 12 days, the administration is now trying to avoid complying by appealing prematurely. They urge the court to reject this tactic and dismiss the appeal.

The legal proceedings in this high-profile case have been moving quickly. It all started with an emergency hearing before U.S. District Judge Amir H. Ali on Tuesday morning after the plaintiffs showed evidence that the administration had not followed the temporary restraining order to halt the freezing of funds.

During those proceedings, Ali lambasted the government’s attorney for saying he was “not in a position to answer” whether any of the funds covered by the court’s order had been unfrozen

A frustrated Ali concluded the hearing with a series of onerous directions to enforce compliance with the temporary restraining order, instructing the administration to unfreeze funds for contract payments on work completed before Feb. 13, 2025, by 11:59 p.m. on Wednesday.

The administration immediately filed a petition with the Circuit Court of Appeals in Washington seeking a short-term administrative stay on Ali’s order as well as a stay pending appeal. The administration asserted that it would be impossible for the government to abide by the directive within the allotted time frame, claiming that it could not pay out “nearly $2 billion in taxpayer dollars within 36 hours” unless it were to disregard its own payment-integrity systems.

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