Trump faces a lot of court setbacks on education, traffic jam prices and voting

Trump faces a lot of court setbacks on education, traffic jam prices and voting

In the Federal Court Building throughout the country Thursday, President Donald Trump’s administration faced a series of legal setbacks to implement the President’s agenda.

On issues ranging from educational policies and voting rights to determining congestion prices, a series of decisions and developments marked the latest legal setbacks for administration that combat almost 200 lawsuits in the court.

Three Judges Separately – Including the two appointed by Trump – blocking the government from holding federal funds to schools with the Dei program.

President Donald Trump is waiting for the arrival of Prime Minister Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Stoere at the White House in Washington, April 24, 2025.

Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

In California, a federal judge forbade Trump’s government from cutting federal funds to what was called asylum jurisdiction in which local police refused to help uphold the federal immigration policy.

After Trump tried to re -shape the election with the executive order last month, a federal judge blocked the government from requiring evidence of citizenship when registering to vote, by saying only the congress had the power to institutionalize such changes.

In immigration issues, Trump’s administration is in hot water with many judges. A Judge Boston is investigating whether the Trump government violates the court orders when he got rid of four members suspected of the de Aragua trend to El Salvador, and a judge in Maryland appointed by the President ordered Wednesday the return of a man who was deported to El Salvador whose deported violated the settlement of the court.

In New York, DOJ’s lawyer accidentally revealed internal documents that recognize the shortcomings in their plans to kill the price of traffic jams.

Friday is regulated to bring new legal issues to the front lines, with federal judges in Boston taking whether the efforts of the Trump government to dismantle the Ministry of Education are legal. The trial will mark the first time a federal judge considers this issue because Trump issued an executive order last month which directed Linda McMahon’s education secretary to take steps to reduce the department.

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