A judge’s order blocking the Trump administration’s spending freeze is “intolerable judicial overreach,” the Department of Justice (DOJ) argued Monday night.
The DOJ appealed Judge John J. McConnell, Jr.’s block on the spending freeze to the First Circuit Court of Appeals, writing that a judge “cannot oversee the Executive Branch’s spending authority for several weeks and shield its order from appeal by labeling it a temporary restraining order.”
“This appeal arises from an extraordinary and unprecedented assertion of power by a single district court judge to superintend and control the Executive Branch’s spending of federal funds, in clear violation of the Constitution’s separation of powers,” the filing states. “To put a halt to this intolerable judicial overreach, this Court should stay the orders under review pending disposition of this appeal, and should enter an immediate administrative stay of the orders until the motion for stay pending appeal is resolved.”
🚨 While he was in private practice as an attorney until 2009, Judge John J. McConnell Jr, donated hundreds of thousands to Democratic campaigns and political action committees, including 2008 presidential campaigns of Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden and Barack Obama. pic.twitter.com/R7Mwt0JRFc
— Daily Caller (@DailyCaller) February 10, 2025
The administration objected that the government “must now go to the district court for preclearance” on the lawful activity of “delaying the issuance of funding that has been tainted by fraud.” (RELATED: ‘Outside The Power Of A Federal Judge’: Courts Test Boundaries As Trump Admin Sparks Showdown Over Executive Authority)
The judge held Monday that the administration was violating his prior order and suggested continued opposition could result in criminal contempt charges.
McConnell donated hundreds of thousands to Democrat campaigns and groups before becoming a judge, including to Democratic Rhode Island Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, who recommended his nomination, according to Federal Election Commission records.
The issue stems from a lawsuit filed Jan. 28 by nearly two dozen democratic attorneys general, who challenged an Office of Management and Budget memo directing agencies to pause payments for activities impacted by Trump’s executive orders.
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