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The Department of Education laid off roughly 1,400 employees in March and a federal judge paused the move. The Supreme Court now says it was permissible.
The Supreme Court on Tuesday lifted a lower court order that blocked sweeping layoffs of federal workers at nearly two dozen agencies.
The Supreme Court's conservatives said it was a federal judge in San Francisco, not President Trump, who exceeded her authority.
Federal agencies across government can resume laying off their employees en masse after the Supreme Court reversed a court order that barred those reductions, with several agencies likely to move ...
On Tuesday, as it has done with most of these cases, the court sided with the Trump administration and allowed the president to resume plans for mass federal layoffs. In a statement, Harrison Fields, ...
Thousands of employees across US federal health agencies received an email Monday afternoon telling them they were out of a ...
At Trump's direction, the administration has come up with plans to reduce staff at the US Departments of Agriculture, ...
The high court said it had based its decision on the legality of Trump’s executive order, and didn’t rule on whether any reorganization plans broke the law.
The IRS sent RIF notices to nearly 80% of staff at the Office of Civil Rights and Compliance, but kept layoffs on hold after a recent Supreme Court ruling.
The Supreme Court on Monday said President Donald Trump may proceed with his plan to carry out mass layoffs at the Department ...
The Education Department has pledged to carry out required functions, but questions remain about its plan for contending with ...
The US Supreme Court has allowed the Trump administration to proceed with sweeping staff cuts at the Department of Education, lifting a lower court injunction that had paused layoffs of around 1,400 ...