Secretary of State Marco Rubio signed a memorandum exempting some aid from the funding pause.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Jan. 28 issued a waiver for some humanitarian aid, exempting it from President Donald Trump’s 90-day pause on foreign assistance.
Rubio said in a memorandum that life-saving aid is still going to be funded. He defined life-saving humanitarian assistance as core life-saving medicine, medical services, food, shelter, subsistence assistance, supplies, and reasonable administrative costs as necessary to deliver such assistance.
“This waiver does not apply to activities that involve abortions, family planning conferences, administrative costs … gender or DEI (diversity, equity, and inclusion) ideology programs, transgender surgeries, or other non-life saving assistance,” Rubio said.
Shortly after taking office, Trump suspended U.S. foreign aid for 90 days over concerns that the government’s foreign policy was “not aligned with American interests and in many cases antithetical to American values.”
The pause is in place pending reviews of foreign aid to ensure funding is going to programs aligned with the president’s foreign policy, according to Trump’s executive order.
The United States is the largest single donor of aid globally. In fiscal year 2023, it disbursed $72 billion in assistance.
The State Department said in a new fact sheet that Rubio’s review of foreign assistance programs is already paying dividends.
“We are rooting out waste. We are blocking woke programs. And we are exposing activities that run contrary to our national interests,” the agency said. “None of this would be possible if these programs remained on autopilot.”
In the days the pause has been in place, the department has received waiver requests for billions of dollars in funding. Most of those requests are still under a merit-based review because they are not considered emergency or life-threatening, the department said. Some requests have already been rejected because they’ve been deemed out of alignment with Trump’s agenda.
Rubio has said that it’s important to examine the funding to ensure it makes America safer, stronger, or more prosperous.
A previous State Department memo informed staffers that the pause meant a “complete halt” on foreign aid, with exceptions for emergency humanitarian food assistance and officials returning to their duty stations.
A spokesperson for U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres said in a Jan. 27 statement that the secretary-general had urged the U.S. government to consider additional exemptions “to ensure the continued delivery of critical development and humanitarian activities for the most vulnerable communities around the world, whose lives and livelihoods depend on this support.”
Reuters contributed to this report.