Trump administration asks SCOTUS to green light Education Dept. grant cuts

The Trump administration submitted an emergency appeal with the Supreme Court, which is seeking to obtain approval to reduce hundreds of millions of dollars as grants from the Ministry of Education as part of its efforts to eliminate the initiatives of diversity, fairness and integration within the department.
The Ministry of Justice requests the court to submit a judicial order at the country level that prevents it from ending the grants under two federal programs.
Earlier this month, the American boycott judge in Boston Mongol John ordered the Trump administration to restore grants-through a temporary restriction-which is published through the Teacher’s Quality Partnership (TQP) and support for active teachers development programs (SEED).
Minister of Education Linda McMahon (Getty Images)
The Ministry of Education has been greatly dismantled in the new Trump executive order
Days later, the Appeal Court in the first American circle refused to stop John’s order, which led to the presentation of today’s file.
Eight states, including California, accused the grant department that has erected illegally, as Congress was created as a solution to the lack of teachers, especially in rural and disadvantaged societies. The United States has argued with more than $ 600 million of grants for teachers’ preparation programs, often in areas such as mathematics, science and private education.
The Trump administration criticized the Zerian order in its file and argued that federal courts exceed its jurisdiction.
“This case embodies a flood from the recent cases that arouse the question: Does one judge enjoy the skill to grant the paragraph that lacks the judicial jurisdiction of the unwanted authority to force the United States government to push millions (and perhaps lose it forever) with taxpayers?” Acting lawyer Sarah Harris wrote.
President Donald Trump signs an executive order last week to reduce the size and scope of the education department along with school children who sign their own publications, during a ceremony in the Eastern Chamber of the White House in Washington, DC, (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
“Unless this court addresses this question, the courts of federal provinces will continue to overcome their jurisdiction through the executive branch order to restore the grants that are legally ended throughout the government, and continue to pay in exchange for programs that the executive branch sees as inconsistent with the interests of the United States, and sending taxpayer money that may never be enumerated.”
Trump still needs help in Congress in a plan to cancel the education department
The deposit argues that the case provides a “perfect candidate” to the Supreme Court for restraint on federal courts.
“This court must put a quick end during the era of unconstitutional federal provincial courts as self -renovated managers to finance the executive branch and grants to determine.”
The appeal will go to Judge Jackson on the basis of the judicial jurisdiction, and you will likely ask her colleagues to weigh. A directed schedule will be set and will be followed on the temporary application.
The Supreme Court requests the response of the opposition parties by Friday at 4 pm, as well as California, and the opposition parties are Massachusetts, New Jersey, Colorado, Ilinoi, Maryland, New York and Yorkanson.
The Ministry of Education previously said that the programs are studying “divisive ideologies” such as diversity, fairness and inclusion (DEI) and “instructions on white concession and white sovereignty.”
President Donald Trump has sparked DEI policies. (Getty Images)
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The Republican President signed an executive order calling for the dismantling of the Ministry of Education, and his administration began reforming many of its work, including cutting dozens of contracts that she rejected as “wake up.”
A wave of lawsuits slowed the Trump administration’s agenda by lifting the Ministry of Justice another four emergency appeals to the court rulings, including regarding citizenship in the field of birth and an appeal to stop an order that requires the re -employment of thousands of federal workers.
Judges previously rejected an offer to freeze nearly two billion dollars of foreign aid and did not immediately allow Trump’s shooting to move forward with the president of the Federal Supervision Agency.
Reuters and the Associated Press contributed to this report.
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2025-03-26 18:36:00