Justice Barrett is playing a surprising role in repeatedly thwarting Trump’s massive federal funding freeze

U.S. President Donald Trump stands with newly sworn in U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Amy Coney Barrett during a ceremonial swearing-in event on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, D.C. on Oct. 26, 2020 (Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images).

U.S. President Donald Trump stands with newly sworn in U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Amy Coney Barrett during a ceremonial swearing-in event on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, D.C. on Oct. 26, 2020 (Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images).

An appellate court in Massachusetts on Tuesday rejected the Trump administration’s emergency bid to lift a lower court’s order that blocked the president’s massive funding freeze and directed the government to “immediately” restore large swathes of federal funding across multiple agencies.

In a brief two-page order, a three-judge panel on the First Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously denied the administration’s request for an administrative stay of the district court’s temporary restraining order, becoming the second court in the last two weeks to hand the president a legal loss in the funding freeze battle by citing one of Donald Trump’s own Supreme Court nominees: Justice Amy Coney Barrett.

U.S. District Judge John McConnell, of Rhode Island, on Jan. 31 issued a temporary restraining order blocking the administration from implementing a policy that would freeze funding on distributions to federal grant programs. McConnell extended the restraining order on Feb. 6, then granted the plaintiffs’ motion for enforcement on Feb. 10 after finding that the administration had violated his restraining order.

The Feb. 10 order directed the administration to “immediately restore frozen funding” and “end any federal funding pause” during the pendency of the temporary restraining order. McConnell reasoned that the funding freeze was both unconstitutional and in violation of a federal law that blocks government action deemed “arbitrary and capricious.”

“The States have presented evidence in this motion that the Defendants in some cases have continued to improperly freeze federal funds and refused to resume disbursement of appropriated federal funds,” McConnell wrote in the five-page order. “The broad categorical and sweeping freeze of federal funds is, as the Court found, likely unconstitutional and has caused and continues to cause irreparable harm to a vast portion of this country. These pauses in funding violate the plain text of the TRO.”

The administration immediately fired back, asking the First Circuit to halt McConnell’s “extraordinary and unprecedented assertion of power” by issuing an administrative stay on his temporary restraining order — despite the fact that temporary restraining orders typically cannot be stayed.

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