The Trump administration got here to the Supreme Court docket on Friday afternoon, asking the justices to briefly block an order by a federal decide in San Francisco that bars the Trump administration from implementing an govt order and a associated memorandum calling for large-scale reductions within the federal workforce – the elimination of jobs, adopted by the switch or firing of the staff who did these jobs.
U.S. Solicitor Basic D. John Sauer advised the courtroom that the order by Senior U.S. District Decide Susan Illston has “brought about mass confusion all through the Government Department.” “Neither Congress nor the Government Department has ever supposed to make federal bureaucrats ‘a category with lifetime employment, whether or not there was work for them to do or not,’” Sauer wrote.
In keeping with regulation professor Stephen Vladeck, who carefully tracks emergency functions on the Supreme Court docket, this was the Trump administration’s fifteenth request for emergency aid within the 16 weeks since Trump’s second inauguration. Yesterday the justices heard oral arguments in one other of Trump’s request for emergency aid, asking the justices to partially block three orders by federal judges that bar the federal government from imposing Trump’s Jan. 20 govt order ending birthright citizenship.
The dispute on this case started after President Donald Trump issued an govt order in February instructing federal companies to “promptly undertake preparations to provoke large-scale reductions in pressure (RIFs), in keeping with relevant regulation.”
A number of labor unions, advocacy teams, and native governments went to federal courtroom, searching for to bar the Trump administration from implementing each the chief order and a memo issued to federal companies by the Workplace of Personnel Administration and the Workplace of Administration and Funds to hold out the order.
Illston issued a short lived restraining order on Could 9 that prohibited the Trump administration from planning any RIFs and continuing with any present RIFs, and she or he ordered the administration to offer the plaintiffs with paperwork associated to the RIFs. (Illston has, Sauer famous, “briefly paused” the disclosure requirement, though he added that she may “reinstate that order as early as subsequent week.”)
The Trump administration went to the U.S. Court docket of Appeals for the ninth Circuit, asking it to pause Illston’s order whereas it appealed. The courtroom of appeals set a briefing schedule on the federal government’s keep request that can end on Could 22, someday earlier than the TRO is slated to run out.
Stressing that Illston had “entered a nationwide injunction that governs the personnel practices of 21 federal companies, together with 11 Cupboard-level companies, and grants common aid that far exceeds something essential to remediate the events’ putative accidents,” Sauer urged the courtroom to place Illston’s order on maintain whereas the federal government’s attraction continues within the decrease courts. He advised the justices that the order “suffers from a number of deadly flaws.” Federal regulation, he contended, bars the plaintiffs from immediately difficult the RIFs in federal courtroom; they can not do an “end-run” round that prohibition by as a substitute asking a federal decide to pause implementation of Trump’s govt order and the OMB/OPM memo.
The justices also needs to intervene as a result of Illston’s order has brought about “ongoing and extreme hurt” to the federal government, Sauer continued. Specifically, he contended, it “has delivered to a halt quite a few in-progress RIFs at greater than a dozen federal companies, compelling the federal government to retain — at taxpayer expense — hundreds of staff whose continuance in federal service is decided by companies to not be within the authorities and public curiosity.”
Lastly, Sauer requested the justices to impose an administrative keep – that’s, to briefly pause Illston’s order whereas they think about the federal government’s request. “Every single day that the district courtroom’s order stays in impact,” he lamented, “a government-wide program to implement company RIFs is being halted and delayed, sustaining a bloated and inefficient workforce whereas losing numerous taxpayer {dollars}.”
Posted in Emergency appeals and functions, Featured
Instances: Trump v. American Federation of Authorities Staff
Beneficial Quotation:
Amy Howe,
Trump asks justices to carry decide’s order pausing mass federal layoffs,
SCOTUSblog (Could. 16, 2025, 5:55 PM),
https://www.scotusblog.com/2025/05/trump-asks-justices-to-lift-judges-order-pausing-mass-federal-layoffs/

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