Log In

Devex Newswire: New deadline set for Trump administration to pay USAID partners

Published 1 week ago8 minute read
Sign up to Devex Newswire today.

The Trump administration may get a case of the Monday blues because of a court ruling yesterday.

Peter Marocco had a closed-door briefing — we have the inside scoop. Plus, drama at USADF.

+ On Tuesday, March 11, we’ll bring you . We’ll be joined by senior figures from the U.K. development community to assess the impact of the recently announced aid cuts on the wider state of world affairs. Register now to join us.


Sign up to this newsletter for an inside look at the biggest stories in global development, in your inbox daily.

In the latest legal twist, the Trump administration has been given until 6 p.m. Monday to pay the aid organizationsthat are suing it, including nonprofits such as AVAC, and for-profits such as Chemonics and DAI, my colleague Elissa Miolene reports.

Judge Amir Ali called his order  of nearly $2 billion in suspended foreign aid.

Ali’s order had been bounced to the Supreme Court, which at first granted the administration a short reprieve before pushing the case back to Ali, with the Supreme Court ultimately stating the District Court should clarify what the government is obligated to pay — and within what timelines.

The hearing also tangled with a topic that’s been repeatedly brought up by both parties in the case: , and the cancellation of nearly 10,000 as a result.

While the organizations questioned — which the Trump administration has described as a case-by-case process done by Secretary of State Marco Rubio — , Indraneel Sur, the lawyer representing the Trump administration, said it was a “problem of [the plaintiffs’] own litigation choices.”

“Agencies did the work of making decisions quickly” because of the organizations’ lawsuit and Ali’s resulting mandate, Sur said, refuting the vast number of award cancellations as a “mass termination.”

Ali and Sur also went back and forth on the separation of powers between the U.S. Congress and the executive branch, with Ali asking Sur if cutting money that was appropriated by Congress — such as foreign assistance — Ali said the idea that “appropriations were optional” would be a “country-shaking prospect.”

Trump administration ordered to pay select USAID partners by Monday

For the latest episode of our podcast series, Elissa joins Devex’s Adva Saldinger and Fiona Zublin to discuss the latest updates in the U.S. aid saga as well as the shocking cuts to the U.K.’s foreign aid budget.

Peter Marocco, head of the U.S. State Department’s Office of Foreign Assistance and acting deputy administrator at USAID, threw a curveball in a closed-door briefing with the House Foreign Affairs Committee. He posed a head-scratcher: Details were sparse on the whys and hows of it all.

The hourlong session gave members just 30 seconds each for questions, sparking some Democrats to call for a more open debate. Devex got the hushed details from insiders.

Marocco didn’t hold back,  by backing LGBTQ+ and “color revolutions” — echoing Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. That stirred the pot!

He claimed the review of foreign aid is deep and ongoing, contrary to court documents saying it's done. He’s also eyeing more chats with big names such as the Gates Foundation. On delayed programs, Marocco  and didn't touch on nonpayment issues. He hinted at Department of Justice prosecutions for corruption coming up but kept it vague.

Rep. Mike McCaul highlighted that waivers for programs such as PEPFAR, the U.S. government's global effort to combat HIV/AIDS, aren’t doing much good, with funds trickling slowly. . He also claimed that only 7.3% of USAID funding actually reaches locals — a misinterpretation of data that refers to the amount spent through local partners.

What Peter Marocco told lawmakers about USAID at a closed door meeting

 Funding freeze on US foreign aid is ‘over,’ Trump administration claims

+ Explore our dedicated page for all the latest news, in-depth analysis, and exclusive insights on how the Trump administration’s policies are reshaping global development.

Early yesterday, the U.S. African Development Foundation, or USADF, got an unwanted visitthat  than a regular day at the office.  Marocco led a team from the Department of Government Efficiency, aka DOGE, along with a U.S. marshal, right into USADF’s headquarters. They even locked several foundation personnel out of the treasury systems.

, stating, “The United States African Development Foundation offices were entered today by Mr. Peter Marocco and others who we do not believe are authorized to represent the agency,” and affirmed its commitment to follow the law and treat its staff with dignity.

The drama didn’t just start then. There was a failed attempt to enter the building a day before, but yesterday, the team didn’t just stop at the door —  and made it to the 10th floor. There was even a bit of a media blackout — literally, as power was knocked out to several floors and the press kept from using the elevator.

“I’m scared for what this means — this is ,” an official familiar with the situation tells Devex. “What does this mean for us as a country, if an independent agency is being illegally taken over by the executive branch when we can clearly only be dissolved by Senate?”

To hammer the point home, shortly after the fracas, USADF President Ward Brehm in the U.S. District Court, stating that DOGE “launched a full-on assault against USADF.”

“Without this Court’s immediate intervention, Defendants will continue their tactics and strongarm their way into USADF, no matter that USADF has a legally constituted Board and President. And within days, the damage that they do will be irreparable,” the complaint states.

DOGE takes over US African Development Foundation

While the , Spain, traditionally centers on mobile communications, in recent years, its scope has broadened significantly to encompass a wider range of technologies.

Devex was on the ground this week to track  Conversations explored AI's potential to revolutionize health care delivery, alongside the critical need to mitigate associated risks.

Notably, a panel on AI regulation highlighted the urgent call for to establish strong governance frameworks, ensuring responsible deployment of this transformative technology.

The growing convergence of global and digital health was a clear theme at MWC. Addressing this intersection, Vodafone Foundation Managing Director Lisa Felton pinpointed  between the global north and south. Reinforcing the importance of bridging this gap, Jean Philbert Nsengimana, chief digital health adviser at the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, underscored AI's pivotal role in low- and middle-income countries, particularly in mitigating health worker shortages.

 AI is a genuine opportunity for the international community

 How AI is bringing accuracy and efficiency to malaria diagnosis in Uganda

For three years, a startup founder in East Africa has been quietly revolutionizing agriculture with a little help from USAID grants. These funds — modest but crucial — allowed for hardware purchases, wages, and attracting additional investors. However, USAID's recent funding freeze has cut their financial runway short, in an afternoon," according to the founder.

USAID has been  and nonprofits such as GivePower, but recent policy changes are threatening to pull the plug on these ventures. As the founder puts it, “That money is literally going to sink us,” underscoring the dire situation for many entrepreneurs reliant on USAID’s support, writes my colleague Ayenat Mersie.

Traditionally, USAID has invested millions across Africa, fostering innovation and supporting impactful projects. For instance, in Ghana alone, about $8 million annually has been channeled into startups. Programs such as Development Innovation Ventures, or DIV, have made significant contributions, with initiatives like Dimagi’s CommCare, which is now a global health tool used by millions.

However, with USAID’s downsizing and the shift toward the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation  — which favors larger, established companies —

As the support landscape shifts, startups are left scrambling for new funding sources, forced to rethink their strategies and seek self-sustaining, locally driven solutions. The challenge is daunting, but as industry experts suggest, “This is the time to develop models that change things,”

 'That money is going to sink us' — USAID-funded startups fight to survive

 The urgent need to rethink Africa's health financing

 As US aid falters, development finance trends to watch in 2025 (Pro)

Start your 15-day free trial today to access all our expert analyses, insider insights, funding data, exclusive events, and the Pro Insider — a special Sunday newsletter covering our industry’s big moves.

The , a multibillion-dollar initiative to help low- and middle-income countries transition from coal and other nonrenewable energy sources. [DW]

The U.N. Office of Humanitarian Affairs has allocated  around the globe. [OCHA]  

The  over the country’s “unjust racial discrimination” against white Afrikaners. [The Guardian]

 at the biggest stories in global development.

Printing articles to share with others is a breach of our terms and conditions and copyright policy. Please use the sharing options on the left side of the article. Devex Pro members may share up to 10 articles per month using the Pro share tool ( ).

Origin:
publisher logo
Devex
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...

You may also like...