" Hours into his second term, President Trump
issued Executive Order 14163, “direct[ing] that entry into the United States of
refugees under the [United States Refugee Assistance Program (USRAP)] be
suspended” indefinitely pending a determination by the President that “resumption of entry of refugees into the United States under the USRAP would be in the interests of the United States.” This action fulfilled the President’s campaign promise to “suspend refugee resettlement” as part of efforts to “immediately end the migrant invasion of America.” The order halts, without a defined end date, the carefully constructed framework Congress established through the Refugee Act of 1980. The Court must determine whether this executive action exceeds statutory bounds, and whether the federal agencies’ implementation of the Order comports with administrative law.
After carefully reviewing the Parties’ briefing and holding a hearing on the
matter, the Court granted Plaintiffs’ motion and issued a preliminary injunction on February 25, 2025. Dkt. No. 39. This Order is to elucidate the Court’s reasoning and define the parameters of the injunction further. In sum, though the Executive
enjoys considerable latitude to suspend refugee admissions, that discretion is not
boundless. Where, as here, Presidential action effectively nullifies a congressionally established program, causing irreparable harm to vulnerable individuals and organizations, judicial intervention becomes necessary to preserve the separation of powers our Constitution demands.
https://refugeerights.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/ECF-45-PI-Order-including-Findings-of-Fact-Conclusions-of-Law.pdf
It concludes by enjoining the Administration from:
"a. Enforcing or implementing Executive Order 14163 § 3(a), (b), and
(c), and § 4 in its entirety;
b. Suspending or implementing the suspension of refugee processing,
decisions, and admissions;
c. Suspending or implementing the suspension of USRAP funds,
including implementing the Suspension Notices sent by the U.S.
State Department to all refugee and resettlement partners on
January 24, 2025;
d. Withholding reimbursements to resettlement partners for USRAP
related work performed pursuant to cooperative agreements before
January 20, 2025. "
If you want to wade through 62 pages of legalese, albeit well written and excellently argued legalese, it's in the link provided. Kudos to Judge Whitehead for stopping yet another unconstitutional and unlawful attempt by Trump to rewrite US law without legislative approval.
@my-king-and-i removed their quoted postI think pussy has been allowed ever since Trump talked about grabbing girls by it in public.
@no1marauder saidSo the main question is will Trump actually follow the orders of the court?
" Hours into his second term, President Trump
issued Executive Order 14163, “direct[ing] that entry into the United States of
refugees under the [United States Refugee Assistance Program (USRAP)] be
suspended” indefinitely pending a determination by the President that “resumption of entry of refugees into the United States under the USRAP would be in the interests o ...[text shortened]... other unconstitutional and unlawful attempt by Trump to rewrite US law without legislative approval.
And what can we do if and when he doesn't?
@My-King-And-I saidAnd WhoTF are you again?
Empathy is for pussies.
Since the moderator allows you to use that word.
So will I.
You could try using the word in a clearly useful way.