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White House's large-scale firings paused by federal judge

White House's large-scale firings paused by federal judge
A federal judge in San Francisco temporarily blocked the White House from firing hundreds of thousands of government employees in a ruling late Friday night.Why it matters: It's the latest and broadest setback for President's Trump and DOGE's chainsaw efforts to radically slash and burn the federal government.The ruling pauses for two weeks firings that would block critical services for millions of Americans, including Social Security help, occupational safety and pre-school for poor children.State of play: In her 42-page ruling, Judge Susan Illston, a Clinton appointee, explained that the president does have the right to change the executive branch, but must do so lawfully, and with the cooperation of Congress."Federal courts should not micromanage the vast federal workforce, but courts must sometimes act to preserve the proper checks and balances between the three branches of government."Zoom in: The judge issued a two-week pause, seeking to block immediate terminations, considering the stakes in the case.The 21 agencies affected include the Department of Agriculture, Department of Energy, Labor Department, State Department, the EPA, VA and more. (NPR has a full list.)Catch up quick: A huge coalition of unions, nonprofits and states filed the lawsuit late last month, challenging the White House's massive reorganization of the federal bureaucracy — announced by executive order in February — alleging that it is unconstitutional."We are gratified by the court's decision today to pause these harmful actions while our case proceeds," the coalition said in a statement late Friday. The other side: The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Saturday morning.In court, the administration's lawyer said the plaintiffs waited too long to file their case after the February executive order, per NPR. The government also said personnel issues like these don't belong in the federal courts.The Trump administration has said repeatedly that the president is entitled to hire and fire anyone in the executive branch.Where it stands: Federal agencies are in the midst of carrying out massive so-called reductions-in-force, with federal employees who are still in their jobs on constant alert for the next shoe to drop.The ruling cites examples from the plaintiffs' sworn declarations to illustrate the stakes, like the termination of critical services that had been authorized by Congress, including: The order to fire 221 of 222 employees at The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, who research health hazards faced by mineworkers.The abolishment of the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs, which ensures that federal contractors do not violate federal discrimination law. A threat to cut 7,000 employees from the Social Security administration, which is already seeing long wait times, problems with its website and difficulty making in-person appointments.Layoffs at the federal office of Head Start, which led to job losses at a childcare and early learning program for 1,200 infants and preschoolers."The irreparable harm that plaintiffs will suffer in the absence of injunctive relief outweighs any burden placed on the government by this two-week pause," the judge wrote. "In the context of a dynamic situation, the Court's temporary order seeks to preserve the status quo and protect the power of the legislative branch."What's next: There's a hearing on another injunction on May 22.Are you a federal worker facing the threat of layoffs? Or that's been fired? We'd like to hear your story. Reach out to EmilyRPeck.71 on Signal.

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