Thousands of federal workers fired to downsize the government have been offered their jobs back under a judge’s order, including National Park Service workers in Tucson.
(WIB) – The U.S. Department of Justice has filed an emergency application to the Supreme Court seeking to block a sweeping injunction from a federal judge in California that orders the immediate ...
Unlike HUD, most other agencies have said they are providing backpay to their previously fired probationary employees as they ...
An appeals court in California has refused to halt a judge's order requiring the Trump administration to rehire thousands of ...
U.S. District Judge James Bredar said he had “great reluctance” to issue a sweeping national preliminary injunction in the ...
A running list of the court rulings thwarting — or at least delaying — some of the Trump administration’s most egregious ...
This article was updated on March 27 at 11:16 a.m. The Trump administration came to the Supreme Court on Monday morning, ...
President Donald Trump has suffered a legal blow after a U.S. appeals court refused to pause an earlier ruling requiring his administration to reinstate fired probationary federal workers.
WASHINGTON ‒ Health and Human Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said Thursday he will cut about 10,000 full-time jobs from the ...
Following a judge’s order, many USDA employees were reinstated after layoffs in February, but the Trump administration is ...
The judge said he needed more time to determine whether a longer-term halt should apply to the entire country or be ...
A federal judge indicated Wednesday that he may narrow an earlier ruling that required the Trump administration to rehire nearly 25,000 probationary workers. U.S. District Judge James Bredar entered a ...
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