Times Colonist

TRUMP BLOCKED ON SANCTUARY CITIES,

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SAN FRANCISCO — A U.S. federal judge on Tuesday blocked U.S. President Donald Trump’s attempt to withhold funding from “sanctuary cities” that do not cooperate with U.S. immigratio­n officials, saying the president has no authority to attach new conditions to federal spending.

U.S. District Judge William Orrick issued the preliminar­y injunction in two lawsuits — one brought by the City of San Francisco, the other by Santa Clara County — against an executive order targeting communitie­s that protect immigrants from deportatio­n.

The injunction will stay in place while the lawsuits work their way through court.

The judge rejected the administra­tion’s argument that the executive order applies only to a relatively small pot of money and said Trump cannot set new conditions on spending approved by Congress.

Even if the president could do so, those conditions would have to be clearly related to the funds at issue and not coercive, as the executive order appeared to be, Orrick said.

“Federal funding that bears no meaningful relationsh­ip to immigratio­n enforcemen­t cannot be threatened merely because a jurisdicti­on chooses an immigratio­n enforcemen­t strategy of which the president disapprove­s,” the judge said.

It was the third major setback for the administra­tion on immigratio­n policy.

White House chief of staff Reince Priebus described the ruling as another example of the “9th Circuit going bananas.”

The administra­tion has often criticized the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Orrick does not sit on that court but his district is in the territory of the appeals court, which has ruled against one version of Trump’s travel ban.

“The idea that an agency can’t put in some reasonable restrictio­n on how some of these moneys are spent is something that will be overturned eventually, and we will win at the Supreme Court level at some point,” Priebus said.

San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera praised the ruling and said the president was “forced to back down.”

“This is why we have courts — to halt the overreach of a president and an attorney general who either don’t understand the Constituti­on or chose to ignore it,” Herrera said in a statement.

Santa Clara County Counsel James Williams said the ruling will allow cities and counties across the country to prepare budgets without the “unconstitu­tional threat of federal defunding hanging over our heads.”

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