Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Sarah Trimmer's avatar

Okay - I'm picking up what you're putting down (great analysis). Question though. This is clearly in appropriations bills as you cited, why then did the judge extend the TRO? Wouldn't the 22 plaintiff's in this case, say yo, the Trump administration can't do this because, well...the law??

I did read in the reporting of the judge's extension that she asked the government lawyer if they agreed there would be harm, and he replied, yes, but not irreparable. Seems similar-ish to the USAID situation. I'm confused why the very clear code of federal regulations isn't the justification to shut this down? What am I missing?

Expand full comment
Kbo's avatar

If TRUSK keeps the money spigot in the off position for a while, the research institutions will likely enthusiastically suggest adoption of new, lower rates. US STEM research and training of future scientists is a pillar of our society, economy and future. A little efficiency is not a bad thing either. Good luck to all.

Expand full comment
7 more comments...

No posts