Democratic states sue over Trump welfare funding freeze; judge temporarily reinstates aid

Five Democratic-led states sued the Trump administration over its freeze of $10 billion in federal welfare funding, alleging political motivation. A New York federal judge temporarily blocked the freeze on Friday, reinstating funds while the case proceeds.

Following the Trump administration's early January decision to withhold $10 billion from welfare programs—including the Child Care Development Fund, TANF, and Social Services Block Grant—in California, Colorado, Illinois, Minnesota, and New York over fraud concerns, the states fought back legally.

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker called the freeze "purely political," noting all affected states have Democratic governors. Attorneys general from the states filed suit, arguing it unlawfully overrides Congress on spending and lacks evidence tying it to fraud. Illinois AG Kwame Raoul highlighted impacts on 150,000 children and $1 billion in aid. New York AG Letitia James deemed it "cruel" punishment for opposing the president, while California AG Rob Bonta compared it to past attacks on vulnerable groups.

HHS spokesman Andrew Nixon defended the move, accusing Democrat-led states of complicity in "massive fraud," including aid to those without legal status, and demanding historical data on recipients.

Late Friday, a New York district judge halted the freeze temporarily—potentially for two weeks—pending further proceedings. Benefits fraud remains a bipartisan issue, with billions in improper payments nationwide, including scandals in red states like Mississippi. Critics warn politicization could undermine safety-net programs serving millions.

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Trump Administration Halts Minnesota Childcare Funding After Fraud Exposé

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Following a viral video exposé by journalist Nick Shirley revealing apparent fraud at Somali-run Minnesota day cares, the Trump administration has frozen $185 million in annual federal funding supporting 19,000 children. The action, announced December 30 amid ongoing probes, has sparked partisan clashes, with Governor Tim Walz accusing politicization.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has frozen $10 billion in funding for welfare programs in California, Colorado, Illinois, Minnesota, and New York amid concerns over fraud. Officials are investigating whether benefits are being improperly directed to non-citizens. The move affects key programs providing childcare and assistance to low-income families.

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A federal judge has issued a temporary restraining order halting the Trump administration's freeze on billions in childcare and welfare funding to five blue states, following lawsuits. HHS rolls out stricter disbursement rules while critics highlight larger TANF misuse in states like Mississippi.

A federal judge in Rhode Island has temporarily halted the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development's proposed changes to its $4 billion homelessness programs. The ruling prevents what critics called a disruptive shift that could push thousands back onto the streets during winter. States, cities, and nonprofits argued the overhaul was unlawful and harmful.

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A federal judge in San Francisco has indefinitely barred the Trump administration from carrying out mass reductions-in-force during the ongoing government shutdown, extending an earlier pause and affecting thousands of layoff notices issued since October 1.

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The Trump administration on Saturday, Nov. 8, directed states to reverse any steps taken to issue full Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits for November, following a U.S. Supreme Court administrative stay that paused a lower-court order requiring full payments.

 

 

 

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