Trump faces judicial battles in the US after having locked measures
First blocked measure was to deny the right to citizenship by birth in the United States. Trump wanted to reinterpret 14th Constitution Amendment, registered over 150 years ago. It stipulates that “all people born or naturalized in the United States and subject to their jurisdiction are citizens of the United States and the state in which they reside.”
Federal Judge considered a “flagrantly unconstitutional” measure. John Coughenour considered the request of four states about Donald Trump’s attempt to eliminate the right to citizenship at birth, although 22 states and some civil rights groups went to court. The president said he will resort to the blockade, for now temporary.
According to blockade, it was against a decree that froze from government assistance funds. Trillions of dollars are potentially under analysis due to Trump’s decision. Support to AIDS patients, social programs and dozens of poverty plans would be frozen by the president’s decision.
Judge blocked measurement minutes before entering into force. Loren Alikhan prevented the government from implementing it for now, but the judiciary’s decision expires on February 3. The magistrate described the measure as a “brief administrative suspension” intended to maintain the status quo while the dispute continues.
Today, justice prevented the Trump government from transferring a trans tire to a male prison. A district Judge of Boston, George O’Toole, temporarily blocked authorities from a federal prison to transfer a transgender woman to an installation to men and prevent her access to gender affirmation. This decision, however, is individual and does not prevent other transfers from trans detainees to male prisons.
Donald Trump determined that US national policy is that there are only two genres. The measure also imposed that trans women would be in male arrests. The financing of any gender affirmation assistance for detainees was also closed.
