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A court-ordered pause in May covered nearly two dozen federal agencies at different stages of executing President Trump’s directive for mass layoffs. The Supreme Court said the administration could proceed.
A Supreme Court decision giving the Trump administration the greenlight to lay off tens of thousands of employees threatens to reshape the federal workforce amid a broader battle over whether the
Federal employees in Maryland anxiously await the Supreme Court’s decision on whether the Trump administration will be allowed to proceed with firing thousands of federal government workers.
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Employees at the United States Institute of Peace were terminated for a second time by the Trump administration, after a federal court ruling last month paved the way, according to multiple fired employees.
Attorney General Pam Bondi this week fired multiple Justice Department employees who were involved in two federal prosecutions of President Donald Trump during the Biden administration, according to several people familiar with the terminations who spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid retribution.
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Donald Trump's unprecedented overhaul of the diplomatic corps will undermine U.S. ability to defend and promote its interests abroad, critics say.
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"I'm former, as of 24 hours ago," USIP's former spokesperson told WUSA9 Saturday. "You can't be a spokesperson because there is no entity."
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Business Insider spoke with 16 federal workers after the Supreme Court decision that will allow federal staff cuts to continue.
After the Supreme Court allowed President Trump on Tuesday to resume firing government workers, federal employees rushed to Signal group chats and anxious phone calls, trying to figure out what it meant for them.
"When NOAA, on behalf of Commerce, disseminated termination notices stating that Plaintiffs’ terminations were based on performance, those were inaccurate records about individuals." The post 'Deep-seated animus toward federal workers': Fired climate scientists sue Trump admin in novel class-action lawsuit looking for payday based on Privacy Act violations first appeared on Law & Crime.
When the Trump administration announced executive actions aimed at increasing timber production on federal lands, Oregonians had mixed responses.