Trump administration asks Supreme Court to halt judge's order to rehire probationary federal workers
Source: AP
Updated 11:46 AM EDT, March 24, 2025
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration asked the Supreme Court on Monday to halt a ruling ordering the rehiring of thousands of federal workers let go in mass firings aimed at dramatically downsizing the federal government.
The emergency appeal argues that the judge can’t force the executive branch to rehire some 16,000 probationary employees. The California-based judge found the firings didn’t follow federal law, and he ordered reinstatement offers be sent as a lawsuit plays out.
The appeal also calls on the conservative-majority court to rein in the growing number of federal judges who have slowed President Donald Trump’s sweeping agenda, at least for now. “Only this Court can end the interbranch power grab,” the appeal stated.
The nation’s federal court system has become ground zero for pushback to Trump with the Republican-led Congress largely supportive or silent, and judges have ruled against Trump’s administration more than three dozen times after finding violations of federal law.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/mass-firings-trump-administration-supreme-court-bfe86f68e9877bf58c64bbc3b01db9c6
Article updated.
Original article -
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Trump administration asked the Supreme Court on Monday to halt a ruling ordering the rehiring of thousands of federal workers let go in mass firings aimed at dramatically downsizing the federal government.
The emergency appeal argues that the judge can't force the executive branch to rehire some 16,000 probationary employees.
It also calls on the conservative-majority court to rein in the growing number of federal judges who have slowed President Donald Trump's sweeping agenda, at least for now, by finding that his administration hasn't followed federal law.
The order came from U.S. District Judge William Alsup in San Francisco, who found the firings didn't follow federal law and required immediate offers of reinstatement be sent. The agencies include the departments of Veterans Affairs, Agriculture, Defense, Energy, the Interior and the Treasury.

Walleye
(39,612 posts)
txwhitedove
(4,099 posts)So far, only shock, pain and mounting horror for we the little people.
Cheezoholic
(2,870 posts)liberalgunwilltravel
(768 posts)From gutting the IRS. Empowering tax cheats is the goal.
Cheezoholic
(2,870 posts)Wiz Imp
(4,728 posts)dchill
(41,988 posts)bluestarone
(19,564 posts)TSF has 4 for sure votes before he even asks them.
Grins
(8,231 posts)SCOTUS can’t do ANY of that! No one can “rein in” any federal judge.
onenote
(45,120 posts)The application for stay was presented to Kagan as the justice with jurisdiction to hear such requests arising in the 9th circuit. She could deny it, grant it, or refer it to the full court after briefing.
While some here may freak out if she doesn't immediately deny it, they need to understand that if she denied it, Trump could renew his request before any Justice he wants. So she probably won't deny it immediately. Nor do I think she'd grant it. Rather, she'll set a date in the future for briefs to be filed. This is what she did in the birthright citizenship case, where Trump sought to stay the order from the District Court for the state of Washington and Kagan, having received the application on March 13, gave the other side until April 4 to respond.