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Supreme Court Lets Trump Withhold $4B in Foreign Aid

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Supreme Court Lets Trump Withhold $4B in Foreign Aid, Boosting Presidential Spending Power

 

image.jpeg.6faf84e039fbd4ed6437c21190a0b26a.jpeg

President Donald Trump speaks with reporters on the South Lawn of the White House on his way to board Marine One on Sept. 26, 2025. | Francis Chung/POLITICO via AP

 

The Supreme Court has allowed President Donald Trump to withhold $4 billion in foreign aid approved by Congress, handing him a major victory in a long-running fight over presidential spending power.

 

In a brief, unsigned order on Friday, the court’s conservative majority sided with the administration, saying that foreign-aid groups who challenged the cuts may not have legal standing to sue. The decision, which came over the objections of Justices Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson, effectively blesses Trump’s use of a controversial “pocket rescission” tactic. By stalling until the fiscal year’s end, the administration blocked the funds from being spent without Congress formally agreeing to cancel them.

 

Though not a final ruling on presidential impoundment powers, the order signals the court’s openness to Trump’s argument that foreign policy spending lies firmly within executive control. Critics warn it could embolden Trump to withhold money Congress has appropriated — a flashpoint in the looming government funding showdown.

 

Kagan, writing in dissent, argued the majority was undermining the Constitution’s clear grant of the “power of the purse” to Congress. She criticized the court for rushing to Trump’s side on a matter of such consequence, calling it “the price of living under a Constitution that gives Congress the power to make spending decisions.”

 

The battle now returns to lower courts, but the high court’s early siding with Trump marks a turning point. If upheld, the ruling could reshape the balance of fiscal authority between Congress and the presidency — a dispute that has simmered since the Nixon era and could determine how much leverage lawmakers retain in spending fights.

 

 

Supreme Court Lets Trump Withhold $4B in Foreign Aid,

  • The Supreme Court allowed Trump to block $4 billion in foreign aid approved by Congress using a “pocket rescission” tactic.

  • The ruling, over the dissent of Kagan, Sotomayor, and Jackson, focuses on procedural issues, not the full legality of unilateral impoundment.

  • The decision strengthens Trump’s argument that presidents have broad discretion over foreign policy spending.

  • Critics warn it could weaken Congress’ “power of the purse” and complicate upcoming government funding negotiations.

  • Litigation continues in lower courts, and the Supreme Court could revisit the broader issue in the future.

 

Read the original article here

 

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