Supporters of USAID attend a rally in support in Washington on Feb. 28, 2025. | Jacquelyn Martin/AP
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Ali’s new order gives the Trump administration until 6 p.m. Monday to pay the plaintiffs in the lawsuits all the money they are entitled to on invoices and similar requests to draw down grant funds initiated prior to Feb. 13. Contractors and grantees who are not parties to the litigation are not subject to the new Monday deadline, so the money they are owed will likely remain frozen for now.
It’s not entirely clear how much money the administration will be required to disburse by Monday, but
people involved in the litigation said it appears to be at least several hundred million dollars.
During a hearing Thursday afternoon that stretched to more than four hours, Ali repeatedly emphasized that he was seeking to follow the Supreme Court’s admonition that he show “due regard for the feasibility of any compliance timelines.”
“I intend to take that instruction very seriously,” the judge said.
State Department officials worked overnight Wednesday to approve about $70 million in payments to the plaintiffs in the suits, Justice Department attorneys said in a court filing Thursday.
Ali, an appointee of former President Joe Biden, said that volume of approvals gave him confidence that the State Department could get the remainder of the accumulated bills out to the plaintiffs by working at a similar pace over the next four days.

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