Donald Trump is facing multiple legal cases with in two months of becoming US President. Here are latest developments
USA President Donald Trump is facing a number of legal cases over policy issues.

Here is a look at recent developments in the cases.
Judge Demands Answers about Deportations
A federal judge temporarily ordered the Trump administration to halt deportations of hundreds of alleged Venezuelan gang members to a mega-prison in El Salvador. Three deportation flights landed there after that order, but the government denied violating it, sparking an ongoing legal standoff over whether officials were defying the judge.
The administration argues the judge overseeing the case, James Boasberg, has no authority to stop the deportations under the Alien Enemies Act, a centuries-old law that gives the president power to deport people whose primary allegiance is to a foreign power and who might pose a national security risk in wartime.
Boasberg said he is skeptical the administration can apply that law to the deportations because it is intended for enemies in wartime. He has also demanded answers about the precise timings of the flights and the administration's compliance with his order, calling its responses so far "woefully insufficient."
Lawyers for the protesters say they are lawfully residing in the U.S. and being unfairly targeted for political reasons.
Judge Blocks Doge from 'unbridled' Access to Social Security Data
A judge on March 20 blocked Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency from having "unbridled access" to data of millions of Americans at the Social Security Administration, saying the arrangement likely violated privacy laws.
On March 19, another judge found Musk's moves to shut down the U.S. Agency for International Development likely violated the Constitution because he is not a Senate-confirmed cabinet official.
Judges have declined to block DOGE from accessing computer systems at the departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, Energy and others, although the team has been barred from accessing sensitive Treasury Department payment systems.
Pausing the Firing of Federal Workers
Two judges have separately ruled that the Trump administration's firings of 25,000 probationary federal workers were likely illegal and ordered them reinstated pending further litigation.
Both judges said the mass firings appeared to violate regulations that only permit the federal government to fire certain workers for individualized reasons.
Agencies covered by the orders include the U.S. Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Education, Energy, Health and Human Services, Homeland Security, Housing and Urban Development, Interior, Labor, Transportation, Treasury and Veterans Affairs.
The Trump administration has said it is working to bring all of the employees back but has appealed both decisions. On March 21, an appeals court declined to pause one of the orders.
Rolling back Diversity, Equity and Inclusion policies
A judge on March 10 ordered the Trump administration to temporarily restore grants for teacher preparation it nixed as part of its efforts to eradicate diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives, finding the Department of Education provided "no reasoned explanation" for cutting the funding.
In a win for Trump, an appeals court ruled his administration could temporarily implement a ban on DEI programs at federal agencies and businesses with government contracts, undoing a lower court order that blocked the move.
Blocking Transgender Military Ban
A judge temporarily blocked the U.S. military from enforcing Trump's ban on transgender people in the military while a lawsuit challenging the measure goes forward, though she paused enforcement of her ruling to give the government a chance to appeal.
In her ruling, U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes in Washington found the ban likely violated the U.S. Constitution's prohibition on sex discrimination.
On March 21, the government asked Reyes to lift her order in light of new Department of Defense guidance applying the ban only to people whose gender dysphoria symptoms include "marked incongruence and clinically significant distress or impairment."
FAQs
Q1. Who is President of USA?
A1. President of USA is Donald Trump.
Q2. What is full form of DEI?
A2. Full form is diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI).
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