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Does Trump Have the Power to Block Spending That Congress Has Authorized?

President Trump said during the campaign that he wanted to revive presidents’ authority to withhold or delay the spending of funds that Congress has appropriated. (Credit...Kenny Holston/The New York Times)

President Trump has moved aggressively to block the government from disbursing funds authorized by Congress for a range of programs, potentially seizing power from the legislative branch to wield greater say in public spending.

A judge temporarily blocks the president’s order

Even as the White House cast the step as a temporary freeze that would allow it to inspect spending to make sure that it does not conflict with Mr. Trump’s policy priorities, the move set off chaos and uncertainty for vast swaths of the federal government at home and abroad.

Faith Based Events

It also appears to plant the seeds of a potential Supreme Court fight over how much power a president has to refuse to spend money that Congress has appropriated, a tactic that lawmakers sharply curtailed under President Richard Nixon.

Here is a closer look.

In his first week in office, Mr. Trump barred spending on certain initiatives whose mission he disagreed with, including programs involving “diversity, equity and inclusion” and funding to nongovernmental organizations he believes undermine the national interest. He also ordered a 90-day freeze on all foreign aid spending to review it for any conflicts with his priorities, making exceptions for military assistance to Israel and Egypt.

That freeze has jeopardized a broad swath of congressionally authorized aid, like military assistance to Ukraine in its fight against Russia’s invasion, helping pay the salaries of a Kurdish-led militia guarding Islamic State detainees in northeast Syria and the distribution of anti-H.I.V. medication in Africa and developing countries.

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