Trump, layoffs and US federal
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The Trump administration previously asked the Supreme Court to block a temporary restraining order that initially paused the RIF plans, but subsequently withdrew that appeal after the current preliminary injunction replaced the TRO. It is now expected to once again pursue relief before the Supreme Court.
Governmentwide hiring plan calls on agencies to recruit ‘patriotic Americans’ into federal workforce
OPM will track federal hiring data to ensure “only the most talented, capable and patriotic Americans” are hired into the federal workforce.
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24/7 Wall St. on MSNHow many federal employees have Trump and Musk Fired, and How will it impact Government Services?How many federal employees have lost their jobs this year? Take a look at the hard numbers and what it means going forward.
The Trump administration is indefinitely barred from issuing or finalizing widespread layoffs at most major federal agencies after a judge late Thursday night issued a preliminary injunction finding the president likely acted outside his legal and constitutional powers.
Federal benefits cuts in the GOP reconciliation bill have gained a lot of attention. But there are many other bills that could impact feds in different ways.
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When employees at the Philadelphia Department of Veterans Affairs were required to return to full-time in-office work earlier this month, it happened to be Public Service Recognition Week. At a regional office in Germantown,
A federal judge has extended her freeze on President Donald Trump’s plan for mass layoffs and reorganizations at 22 federal agencies until a lawsuit against his administration is resolved, saying the president “likely must” seek approval from Congress before carrying out such widespread changes.
Related Federal judge blocks Trump administration's mass layoffs at Education Department Education secretary defends 15.3% agency budget cut in 'final mission' Robert F. Kennedy Jr. defends lean ...
Maryland added around 4,900 new jobs in April, but labor officials said those gains were dragged down by a loss of 2,600 jobs in the federal workforce in the same month.
A union representing 150,000 federal workers faces allegations of financial improprieties. In an era of mass federal layoffs, here's why it matters.