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The judge rejected the Trump administration's bid to dismiss the California high-speed rail lawsuit

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The U.S. district judge in Sacramento, Dale Drozd, rejected the Justice Department's argument that the lawsuit filed by the California High-Speed-Rail authority in July was filed in the wrong venue and should have gone to the?U.S. Court of Federal Claims.

The state agency that is responsible for the development of the high-speed railway system filed a lawsuit challenging the cancellation of the grant as "arbitrary and capricious".

After cancelling $4 billion of federal grants, the Transportation Department in August canceled an additional $175 million for projects that are part of California's high speed rail project.

The department did not respond immediately to a comment request.

California Governor Gavin Newsom is a Democrat and a vocal critic of President Trump.

The funding cuts are the latest obstacle in the 16 year effort to connect Los Angeles and San Francisco with a 3-hour train ride. This project would provide the fastest passenger rail service available in the United States.

California voters approved the first $10 billion bond in 2008. Since then, more than 50 major structures have been built, including bridges.

The California High-Speed Rail Authority announced in November that it would be seeking proposals for a plan worth $3.5 billion to build high-speed rail systems and track.

The route was originally supposed to be finished by 2020, at a cost of?$33 billion. The projected cost has increased from $89 billion to more than $128 billion. Service is now anticipated to begin?by 2033.

The state challenged a previous decision by Trump to revoke federal grants worth $929 million during his first presidential term in 2019. This led to a settlement under Democratic President Joe Biden in 2021, which restored the full amount.

(source: Reuters)