Guide

Explainer: Trump Executive Order seeking to suppress lawsuits with the blanket enforcement of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure Rule 65 (c )

By Nick Opoku
  • What is happening? On March 11, 2025, President Trump issued an Décret exécutif (the “Order”) directing federal agencies and the Attorney General to “demand” that courts enforce Rule 65 (c). If complied with, a plaintiff seeking an injunction against the government will be required to put up a bond for their case to go forward. 
  • Why it matters: Applying the rule broadly could strengthen the Trump administration’s attack on America’s system of checks and balances, as it would make it prohibitively expensive for public interest groups to challenge unlawful government actions in court. 
  • Our position: The right to contest government actions in court is fundamental to our system of checks and balances. Requiring plaintiffs to post bonds before their cases can proceed would significantly undermine this right.

Why the Order? 

The Law and practice 

  • Rule 65(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure states that a court MAY issue a preliminary injunction or temporary restraining order only if the person requesting it provides a bond to cover any costs and damages a wrongfully restrained defendant could incur. The Rule excludes the U.S. government and its agencies.  
  • The decision to impose a bond is entirely up to the judge. Pour over 100 years, state courts refused a bond as a prerequisite to an injunction. Since the 1961 decision of the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in the case of Ferguson v Tabah, federal courts have given judicial blessing to a judge’s discretion on the rule’s enforcement.  
  • The general reluctance of judges to enforce the Rule continues to manifest as recent attempts by the government to invoke the rule have failed. On February 21, 2025, a federal judge in Maryland waived the bond requirement and issued a nationwide injunction against some of the government’s anti-DEI directives.  
  • Similarly, on February 25, 2025, a federal judge in Washington, D.C., issued a nationwide injunction against the government’s policy that would freeze funding on distributions to federal aid programs. In her order, U.S. District Judge Loren AliKhan, flatly rejected the idea of a bond requirement. 

Guide

Explainer: Trump Executive Order seeking to suppress lawsuits with the blanket enforcement of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure Rule 65 (c )

By Nick Opoku

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