Aid groups sue over Trump's order suspending federal refugee program and
funding
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[February 11, 2025]
SEATTLE (AP) — Major refugee aid groups sued the Trump
administration on Monday over the president's executive order suspending
the federal refugee resettlement program and funding for resettlement
agencies.
The lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Seattle asks the court to
declare Trump’s executive order illegal, stop the order’s implementation
and restore refugee-related funding.
“President Trump cannot override the will of Congress with the stroke of
a pen,” Melissa Keaney, an attorney at the International Refugee
Assistance Project, said in a news release. “The United States has a
moral and legal obligation to protect refugees, and the longer this
illegal suspension continues, the more dire the consequences will be.”
President Donald Trump’s recent order said the refugee program — a form
of legal migration to the U.S. — would be suspended because cities and
communities had been taxed by “record levels of migration” and didn’t
have the ability to “absorb large numbers of migrants, and in
particular, refugees.”
The Trump administration didn’t immediately respond to a request for
comment about the lawsuit.
The lawsuit was filed by the International Refugee Assistance Project on
behalf of Church World Service, the Jewish refugee resettlement agency
HIAS, Lutheran Community Services Northwest and individuals including
refugees.
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The organizations say their ability to provide critical services to
refugees in the U.S. and abroad has been severely inhibited by
Trump's order. It already has impacted refugees who had been
approved to come to the U.S. by having their travel canceled on
short notice and kept families hoping to reunite apart, the lawsuit
says.
It argues that the refugee suspension is unlawful and violates
Congress’ authority to make immigration laws.
The federal refugee program has been in place for decades and helps
people who have escaped war, natural disaster or persecution.
Despite longstanding support for accepting refugees, the program has
become politicized in recent years.
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Refugees undergo an extensive vetting process that can take years.
They are usually referred to the U.S. State Department by the United
Nations.
While the resettlement program has historically enjoyed bipartisan
support, the first Trump administration also temporarily halted it
and then dramatically lowered the number of refugees who could enter
the U.S. each year.
Religious organizations do the majority of the refugee resettlement
work in the United States. Seven of the 10 federally funded national
agencies that resettle refugees are faith-based.
The lawsuit is the latest legal challenge to Trump immigration
policies, including his order to end automatic citizenship for
children born to people in the country illegally, and his order to
shut down asylum access at the southern border.
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