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The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday suspended the Trump administration’s efforts to dismiss the head of an independent agency charged with investigating whistleblower claims, aiming to remake the federal government.
The decision will allow Biden appointee Hampton Dillinger to remain head of the Special Advisors Office until at least February 26th. The High Court will maintain its deadline and will not take any further action.
The Trump administration has called on the court to overturn the temporary recovery of lower court Dillinger. The district court hearing will consider whether to extend the suspension of Dellinger’s shooting.
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President Donald Trump and Hampton Dillinger. Trump is about to reject Dellinger, the director of the Special Advisors Bureau. (AP; Reuters)
Liberal justice Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson voted to completely deny the administration’s demands not to ok fire.
Conservative Justice Neil Gorsucci and Samuel Alito disagreed, saying the lower courts had stepped over, and they questioned whether the court had the power to recover to someone the president fired. Gorsuch wrote in his opinion while acknowledging that some officials appointed by the president were fighting for their removal.
The dispute over Dillinger is the first legal challenge to arrive at the Supreme Court after several terminations under the Trump administration.
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US Supreme Court Building in Washington, DC (AP Photo/Mariam’s Hive)
Dellinger sued the Trump administration in federal court in Washington, D.C. after his firing on February 7th.
“I am pleased to continue my work as an independent government watchdog and whistleblower advocate,” Dellinger said in a statement after minutes on Friday. “The judge concluded that I should be allowed to remain in work while the court judges whether my office can maintain a measure of independence from direct partisanship and political control. I am grateful to the judge.”
He argued that by law he could only dismiss him from his position on job performance issues that were not cited in emails that rejected him from his post.
Trump began his second term in the White House with gusts of executive orders and directives targeted by floods of legal challenges.
The Trump administration has rejected several federal employees (Donald Trump/The Society of Truth)
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Since January 20, administration actions include the President’s birthright citizenship order, immigration policy, federal funding, federal employee acquisition, Elon Musk’s government efficiency and legal action against FBI and DOJ employees. Dozens of lawsuits have been filed regarding the law.
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