Trump administration faces more than 600 lawsuits as courts test legality of second-term policies

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Ruta Deshpande
Ruta Deshpande
Ruta Deshpande is the Co-founder of Regtechtimes and covers the global desk. She specialise in the Department of Justice, SEC and EU Actions.

Since January 2025, over 600 lawsuits have challenged President Trump’s policies, affecting immigration, education, government spending, and press access. Immigrants, states, schools, and media organizations filed cases disputing removals, frozen funds, speech restrictions, and reporting limits. This wave of legal action turned federal courts into a central battleground over the scope of presidential power.

District Courts Emerged as the First Testing Ground for Lawsuits

District courts were the first to hear most challenges to President Trump’s agenda. These courts, which normally operate far from public attention, suddenly found themselves deciding issues with nationwide consequences. Judges were often asked to act quickly, reviewing new executive orders while those policies were already being enforced. Their early rulings shaped how the legal battles unfolded.

When district court judges issued final decisions on the main legal questions in these lawsuits, challengers frequently succeeded. In dozens of completed cases, courts ruled that the administration’s actions did not follow the law far more often than they upheld them. Even when counting early or temporary rulings tied to these lawsuits, judges sided with President Trump’s policies only about 25 percent of the time during 2025. This pattern suggested strong judicial scrutiny at the trial court level.

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Not every lawsuit resulted in a policy being stopped. Out of more than 500 active cases, courts blocked policies in roughly 30 percent of them. In the remaining cases, the policies stayed in effect while challenges continued through ongoing lawsuits. This often happened because the administration appealed unfavorable rulings or higher courts paused district court orders. During the first months of the year, district judges were at the center of the legal storm, handling urgent requests as new policies rolled out rapidly.

Appeals Courts Changed the Pattern of Outcomes

As cases moved upward, appeals courts began to take on greater importance. At this level, the administration performed better. Appeals judges ruled in favor of President Trump’s policies in just over half of the cases they decided in 2025, a noticeable contrast to district court outcomes.

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Part of this difference came from which cases reached the appeals stage. Not every district court loss was appealed. The government focused on cases where it believed reversal was likely. As a result, appeals courts reviewed a smaller, more selective group of lawsuits. Many legal experts also noted that judges appointed during President Trump’s first term were more likely to support his policies, which influenced overall results.

Appeals courts also issue decisions that apply across entire regions of the country. Over time, many similar lawsuits were combined, allowing judges to issue broader rulings. These decisions became binding precedents within their jurisdictions, reducing the number of separate district court rulings and shifting more authority to the appellate level.

The Supreme Court Played a Key but Limited Role

The Supreme Court was heavily involved, mostly through emergency decisions. In 2025, the court considered two dozen cases related to President Trump’s agenda and ruled in his favor in most of them. These emergency rulings decided whether policies could take effect while lawsuits were still pending, but they did not settle the final question of legality.

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Late in the year, the court issued a major decision blocking the deployment of the National Guard to Illinois, a ruling that affected other states as well. This showed that limits were still being enforced. At the same time, the court began hearing fully developed cases involving tariffs, the dismissal of a member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, and an executive order affecting birthright citizenship.

By the end of the year, 634 lawsuits had been tracked, with more than 500 still active. As time passed, appeals courts and the Supreme Court played a larger role in shaping outcomes. Together, district courts, appeals courts, and the Supreme Court formed a layered system that closely examined nearly every major policy through legal review.

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