A Federal Court On Tuesday, the Trump administration temporarily prevented the suspension of refugee resettlement program.
The ruling came during a court hearing on a lawsuit filed by a group of non -profit organizations that receive federal funds under Congress. Non -profit organizations provide a group of newly stirred social services in the United States
On Monday, a judge in Seattle issued a judicial order ordering the Trump administration to restore its contracts with refugee agencies. Tuesday's ruling came from the ninth court court of three judges, which directs the administration to continue to address the requests that started the operation before January 20.
Who is James Boasberg, the American judge at the Trump Deport efforts?

The Federal Court temporarily prevented the Trump administration from suspending the refugee resettlement program. (Tierney L. Cross/Getty Images)
“The proposal is rejected to the extent that a preliminary judicial order of the provincial court applies to individuals who have been approved conditionally to the refugee situation by citizenship and immigration services in the United States before January 20, 2025,” says. “Executive Order No. 14163 does not claim to cancel the refugee status for individuals who received this situation under the admission program for refugees in the United States before January 20, 2025. In all other aspects, the provincial court remained on February 28, 2025, or the first judicial orders.”
On his first day in office, the president Donald Trump An executive order signed to suspend the resettlement of refugees and ordered the Ministry of Internal Security to report in 90 days on whether the resumption will be in the interest of the United States
“Sadly insufficient”: American judge Reams Trump Admin For Days-Late Deport Information

People gather outside the American boycott court after a federal judge prevented President Donald Trump's effort to stop the country's admission system in Seattle. (AP Photo/Eugene Johnson)
“The United States lacks the ability to absorb large numbers of immigrants, especially refugees, to its societies in a way that is not exposed to the availability of resources to Americans, which protects their safety and security, which guarantees the appropriate absorption of refugees,” Trump said in his order on January 20.
The case was presented by refugee groups, including the International Refugee Assistance Project, HIAS, Northern West Lutheran community services and individual refugees. The groups have argued that they were able to provide services to refugees. They were damaged by Trump's order.
It was one of the many attempts to reduce both Illegal and legal migrationIncluding the use of conditional release to allow migrants by the Biden administration.
Click here to get the Fox News app
Trump resettled the refugees in his first term, but President Joe Biden made moves to take more refugees, including the increase of the refugee cover.