Supreme Court Allows Trump to Cut DEI Training for Teachers
Supreme Court Allows Trump to Cut DEI Training for Teachers
The Supreme Court lifted a lower court order on Friday that blocked the Trump administration from cutting millions of dollars in grants for teacher trainings as part of the president’s efforts to terminate taxpayer-funded diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.
In a 5-4 decision, with Chief Justice John Roberts siding with the three liberal justices, the high court ruled that the Department of Education does not need to reinstate more than $65 million in grants that it terminated from a larger $600 million teacher preparation program as litigation plays out.
The unsigned majority opinion argued that it would be unlikely that the Trump administration would be able to recover the funds if it eventually wins its case in court, and that the eight states, led by California, suing the government would not suffer permanent harm without the money.
“The Government compellingly argues that respondents would not suffer irreparable harm while the TRO is stayed,” the opinion stated. “Respondents have represented in this litigation that they have the financial wherewithal to keep their programs running.”
“So, if respondents ultimately prevail, they can recover any wrongfully withheld funds through suit in an appropriate forum.”
The undoing of the Massachusetts federal court’s temporary restraining order marks President Trump’s first win at the Supreme Court in his second term.
The Trump administration lost two prior emergency appeals to the Supreme Court in different cases, where the Justice Department has argued that lower-court judges have improperly obstructed Trump’s agenda.
In the teacher training case, the Trump administration sought relief from the Supreme Court after a federal appeals court in Boston denied its petition.
US District Judge Myong Joun blocked the Trump administration from terminating the grants to the eight states that filed suit last month.
The Biden-appointed judge ruled that the Trump administration did not properly explain how the grants violated Trump executive order on DEI.
The Trump administration maintains the taxpayer-funded programs “promote or take part in DEI initiatives or other initiatives that unlawfully discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, or another protected characteristic.”
In dissent, Justice Elena Kagan argued that the Trump administration failed to ”defend the legality of canceling the education grants at issue here.”
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, in a separate opinion, wrote, “It is beyond puzzling that a majority of Justices conceive of the government’s application as an emergency.”
FEMA, Biden WH Covered Up East Palestine Devastation
Jun 1, 2025
2 min
Trump Taps Palantir to Create Database on Americans
Jun 1, 2025
2 min
OAN Pentagon Reporter Fired After Criticizing Hegseth
Jun 1, 2025
3 min
Trump Withdraws Nasa Nominee Jared Isaacman
Jun 1, 2025
1 min
Russian Bridge Collapses Onto Train: 7 Killed, 30 Injured
Jun 1, 2025
1 min
US Rejects Hamas Ceasefire Proposal: 'Unacceptable'
Jun 1, 2025
2 min
Paris: PSG Fans Riot After Champions League Win, 300 Arrested
Jun 1, 2025
2 min
Declassified Memo: How Clinton Campaign Orchestrated Russia Hoax
Jun 1, 2025
6 min
Iran Capable of Producing 10 Nuke Bombs
Jun 1, 2025
4 min
Hamas Agrees to Release 10 Living Hostages
Jun 1, 2025
2 min
DOJ Launches Title IX Probe Into California Over Trans Athlete Law
May 31, 2025
2 min
Gallup Poll: Republican Support for Gay Marriage Plummets
May 31, 2025
2 min
FDA Approves New Moderna COVID Vaccine
May 31, 2025
<1 min
Saudi Women Held in 'Hellish' Rehab Centers for Disobedience
May 31, 2025
3 min
Trump Doubles Steel Tariffs to 50%
May 31, 2025
5 min
Trump: China ‘Totally Violated’ Tariff Agreement
May 31, 2025
4 min
PBS Sues Trump Over Funding Cuts
May 31, 2025
1 min
DJ Daniel Has 3 New Tumors
May 31, 2025
2 min
Trump Bids Farewell to Musk — DOGE Continues
May 31, 2025
2 min
Trump Doesn't Rule Out Pardoning Diddy
May 31, 2025
2 min