Scoop: ACLU sues Trump at record pace in year one

Scoop: ACLU sues Trump at record pace in year one


The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has launched its fastest-ever legal campaign against President Trump in his first year, filing challenges at a pace that could double those in his first term, according to an analysis first shared with Axios.

Why it matters: Trump is using executive power at historic speed and scale, and the ACLU has again emerged as his most persistent institutional check.


Driving the news: An ACLU report to be released on Thursday found it's on track to file nearly 900 legal challenges against Trump around immigration, civil rights, LGBTQ rights and voting rights.

  • The group filed 434 total cases against Trump during all four years of his first term.
  • Already, the ACLU has filed more than 230 legal actions in Trump's first year back in office.
  • It claims a 64% success rate in delaying, diluting or defeating Trump policies challenged in court so far, according to numbers shared with Axios.

Zoom in: The ACLU was successful in getting the Alien Enemies Act deportations halted after Trump secretly invoked the 18th-century law to deport Venezuelan migrants without due process.

  • The group got the courts to block the use of indiscriminate force against protesters and journalists — and Trump ultimately abandoned plans to deploy National Guard troops in Los Angeles, Chicago and Portland.
  • The ACLU also got the courts to block bans on gender-affirming care in federal prisons.

Yes, but: The U.S. Supreme Court lifted a lower-court block on ICE raids that relied on racial profiling, allowing enforcement to resume in parts of the country, in a major ACLU defeat.

  • The court also stayed nationwide relief for transgender passport holders, permitting enforcement of Trump's gender-marker policy, in another ACLU loss.

What they're saying: "This is a dangerous time for civil rights and civil liberties," ALCU's chief strategy officer Aletheia Henry tells Axios.

  • Henry said the ACLU began preparing for possible legal challenges before Trump won by studying his campaign speeches and Project 2025.
  • "Some of these cases will take years and years to fully draw to a conclusion."

What we're watching: The Supreme Court is set to decide on Trump's attempt to end birthright citizenship by executive order.

  • He signed the birthright citizenship order on Day One, but the ACLU sued within two hours. The courts have kept the policy from ever taking effect — for now.
  • The ACLU has also helped pass more than 50 laws in state legislatures aimed at slowing the implementation of Trump's executive orders.

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