From left to right, the Attorney General Kwame Raoul from Illinois, Andrea Campbell from Massachusetts, Keith Ellison of Minnesota and Matthew J. Platkin von New Jersey in front of the Democratic legislator speaks on the Senate as well as on the judiciary of the Senate and the House Justice doctor on June 23, 2025, at the Capitol Hill, DC (Dc).
Washington -The Attorney General of the Democratic public prosecutor’s office swore on Monday to request the legal challenges against President Donald Trump’s “outrageous presentation” through executive regulations -to impose astonishing citizenship, to prevent amazing global tariffs and much more.
Attorney General Keith Ellison von Minnesota, Matthew J. Platkin from New Jersey, Andrea Campbell from Massachusetts and Kwame Raoul from Illinois spoke before the Democrats about the judicial officers of the Senate and in the judicial officers of the house.
The top representatives of the states and their other colleagues of the Blue State have given legal challenges against Trump’s guidelines, of which they say they threaten the economies of their states and rob the voters of their rights.
Legislators have achieved victories before the federal courts to restore the jobs of dismissed federal workers, to restore the funds acquired in the congress for health initiatives and non -profit organizations and to protect the citizenship for babies born in the United States, including immigrants.
Trump, his administrative officials and the ranking republicans attacked the federal district judge on social media due to decisions that did not like them, and rethink legislative measures to avoid the judiciary.
“At that moment we did over our weight and played an important role,” said Campbell.
More than 20 Democratic AGS -AGs are now waiting for the opinion of the Supreme Court of Justice in the United States, whether they will be maintained the victories of the states’ court Protection of the birth rights citizenship.
30 complaints
MP Jamie Raskin, the top democrat of the House Committee of the Justice, praised the AGs for their role among the hundreds of lawsuits, who questioned Trump’s unilateral measures.
The administration faces 328 complaints from any number of plaintiffs and at least 30 of the democratic state of AGS, says Raskin’s Count. Numerous tracker Keep the latest developments online in the dozens of dozens of cases that Trump started with his second term.
“Federal courts in the entire country have issued 197 provisional temporary orders or temporary interim orders against this reign of lawlessness,” said Raskin from Maryland.
Senator Dick Durbin, the Senate Democrat of the Senate Committee for the Justice, blamed Trump’s executive commands to “have harmful effects on the rights, freedoms and pocket books of all”.
“In this disturbing environment, many Americans have no larger allies than the Attorney General of their states,” said Durbin from Illinois.
Those in the committee informed the legislators that the occurrence of the core of many of their legal challenges.
“If we say that he cannot behave like a king, this means that he cannot take measures that they were carried out and (signed) by a president in the law, and decide for a mood that he would like to convert a program for the Ministry of Ministry of Transport to enforce immigration,” said Platkin and referred to a program with immigration on June 19 and related on June 19 to one on June 19th victory for 20 democratic states whose federal transitdollar were threatened.
Ellison said Trump’s commands that threaten the federal states financing are “bullying, simple and simple”.
“We will endure it. This committee can rely on the state AGS who believe in freedom and justice for everyone to continue to fight. None of us is tired, and we can do it longer than this,” said Ellison.
Medical research HIT
For about two and a half hours, democratic legislators discussed the way their voters could or have been damaged by Trump’s record number of executive regulations since January 20.
Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon from Pennsylvania thanked the AGs for “on behalf of all Americans to hold this administration into account”.
Scanlon, who represents the area of ​​Philadelphia, said her district was particularly from Trump’s command to capture the federal medical research money, including the widespread financing of the National Institute of Health.
“My voters report a whole series of negative consequences. … The participant is told that they can no longer receive the treatment that for many their last hope. The experienced research staff will be released, endangered their living documents and the ability to capture the innovative ability of our medical sector,” said Scanlon.
MP Deborah Ross, whose district of North Carolina’s “Research Triangle” – the location of three major research universities in Durham, Raleigh and Chapel Hill – included, Campbell thanked for their role in a legal victory Restore NIH -Financing.
Ross remembered a woman in her district who turned into her office and asked when a medical studies in which she had participated.
“If you get these astonishing orders, you have to show both that the Trump government has violated the law, the likelihood of success among the merits, and you have to show irreparable damage. And only this woman from whom I have received a message is a demonstration of this irreparable damage,” said Ross.
The Attorney General of Illinois, Raoul, complained that his GOP colleagues did not join the lawsuits, especially with regard to health financing. Raoul told the panel that his father, a doctor, had died of prostate cancer. Years later, Raoul received a similar diagnosis, but survived.
“We should continue to arrive in the research. When we decided to take measures, it is very personal for me,” said Raoul.
“This does not only affect the blue states, right?