City and County of San Francisco v. Trump
Case Overview
San Francisco and eventually dozens of other jurisdictions are challenging the Trump administration's effort to cut federal funding from cities that won't cooperate with ICE. The constitutional limit the plaintiffs are relying on is old but has new force here: the federal government can attach conditions to federal money, but there is a line between conditions and outright coercion, and the Supreme Court said in 2012 that coercion crosses the Constitution. By mid-2025, 35 jurisdictions had joined the case, which means whatever the court decides here sets the rule for how much financial leverage the administration can use to conscript cities into immigration enforcement.
BrynoDC Coverage 4 videos
The Application
The Trump administration's threatened withdrawal of federal funding from sanctuary cities that refuse ICE cooperation presents a coercion question: the withheld funds are substantial enough that San Francisco and 34+ other jurisdictions argue they face an impossible choice between maintaining core services and changing their immigration policies.
The Conclusion
The case is pending in the Northern District of California before Judge Aleta A. Trauger and will clarify the constitutional boundary between permissible federal funding conditions and unconstitutional coercion in the immigration enforcement context, with nationwide implications for federal leverage over sanctuary jurisdictions.
Flag an issue
This tracker is maintained by BrynoDC and is free because readers fund it. Support