Categories: NEWS

Trump appeals to Supreme Court over firing of US agency boss


Reuters

Hampton Dellinger was fired in a one-sentence email this month

President Donald Trump has asked the US Supreme Court to allow him to fire the head of an independent ethics agency that protects whistleblower federal employees.

He has filed an emergency appeal to the country’s highest court to rule on whether he can fire Hampton Dellinger, head of the US Office of Special Counsel.

It is thought to be the first case related to Trump’s blizzard of executive actions to reach the highest court.

Trump has also cut more than a dozen inspectors general at various federal agencies and fired thousands of employees across the US government.

Mr Dellinger, who was nominated by President Joe Biden, sued the Trump administration after he was fired by email this month.

He argued that his removal broke a law that protects leaders of independent agencies from being fired by the president, “except in cases of neglect of duty, malfeasance or inefficiency”.

The agency lists among its primary objectives the protection of federal employees from unlawful actions in reprisal to whistleblowing, according to its mission statement.

A federal judge in Washington DC issued a temporary order on Wednesday allowing Mr Dellinger to hold on to his position while the case is being considered.

On Saturday, a divided US Court of Appeals in the nation’s capital rejected the Trump administration’s request to overrule the lower court.

That has led to the justice department filing an emergency appeal to the conservative-dominated Supreme Court, a filing seen by various US media.

“This court should not allow lower courts to seize executive power by dictating to the president how long he must continue employing an agency head against his will,” Sarah M Harris, acting solicitor general, wrote in the filing provided by the Department of Justice to the Washington Post.

“Until now, as far as we are aware, no court in American history has wielded an injunction to force the president to retain an agency head,” the acting solicitor general wrote, according to the Associated Press news agency.

Watch: Trump’s motorcade drives lap of Daytona 500 racetrack

The Republican president’s orders on immigration, transgender issues and government spending have also become bogged down in dozens of lawsuits in the lower courts. Those cases may ultimately wind up at the Supreme Court, too.

Trump’s efforts to reduce and reshape the 2.3 million-strong civilian federal workforce continued over the weekend.

Workers in various health agencies who are still within their probation periods received letters on Saturday evening informing them they would be terminated, sources told CBS News, the BBC’s US partner.

“Unfortunately, the agency finds that you are not fit for continued employment because your ability, knowledge and skills do not fit the agency’s current needs, and your performance has not been adequate to justify further employment at the agency,” read the letters.

At least 9,500 workers at the departments of Health and Human Services, Energy, Veterans Affairs, Interior and Agriculture have been fired by Trump, according to a tally from Reuters news agency.

Another 75,000 workers have taken a buyout offered to get them to leave voluntarily, according to the White House.

The cost-cutting initiative has been led by department of government efficiency, or Doge, a task force led by Elon Musk.



Source link

Mainedigitalnews.com

Share
Published by
Mainedigitalnews.com

Recent Posts

New Threads, New Forms: MENA/SWANA Dramaturgy and Development

By Nabra Nelson, Marina Johnson, Evren Odcikin. Evren Odcikin joins Marina and Nabra to unpack…

20 hours ago

NHL Playoffs Open Thread: Carolina looking to make it 7 in a row

The fourth and final series of the second round kicks off tonight in Buffalo, as…

20 hours ago

Coinbase Misses Estimates on Q1 Revenue, $400M Loss

Coinbase shares slid Thursday after the US crypto exchange reported a steep first-quarter loss while…

20 hours ago

The controversy over Picasso's most shocking work

Les Demoiselles d'Avignon has been both despised and loved – and reinterpreted Source link

20 hours ago

How Poverty Fell – Marginal REVOLUTION

The share of the global population living in extreme poverty fell dramatically from an estimated…

20 hours ago

A Learning Typology: 7 Ways We Come To Understand

contributed by Stewart Hase, Heutagogy of Community Practice This typology is an attempt to redefine how we…

20 hours ago