Federal workers brace for more firings after judge lifts block on Trump administration job cuts
Good morning US politics readers. Federal workers are bracing for more mass firings after a federal judge ruled that the Trump administration can continue its job-cutting drive.
The ruling came as a blow to the National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU) and four other unions, who sued last week to block the administration from firing hundreds of thousands of federal workers and granting buyouts to employees who quit voluntarily.
The ruling by the US district judge Christopher Cooper in Washington DC federal court is temporary while the litigation plays out.
Meanwhile, as Trump and his lieutenants have been touting supposed cost-savings, a top labor lawyer has warned that instead the mass downsizing of the federal workforce could tally up into a “monumental” bill and could be breaking the law.
Officials have cited “poor performance” when terminating thousands of federal workers. In many cases it’s not true, according to employees embroiled in the blitz, many of whom are now seeking legal advice.
Jacob Malcom was acting deputy assistant secretary for policy and environmental management, and director of the office of policy analysis at the US Department of Interior – until this week, when he resigned in protest against the mass firings of probationary employees.
“This is being done under the guise of ‘poor performance’ or ‘skills not aligned with needs’ but neither are true,” he told the Guardian. “First, no evidence was provided that would suggest that poor performance; in fact, I know some of the individuals that were down my chain of supervision and know they were among the best performers.
You can read the full report by Michael Sainato here:
Here’s what’s happening today:
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Donald Trump is due to address national governors at 11am ET.
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CPAC continues apace. Speakers today include NSA chief Mike Waltz – who told Zelenskyy to “tone down” Trump criticism – at 9.55am, Sebastian Gorka at 11.05am, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt at 5pm and homeland security secretary Kristi Noem at 7.30pm.
Key events

Thomas Graham
As Donald Trump swings his sights from one region to the next, upturning diplomatic relations and confounding allies, leaders of former US partners have clashed with him and come off much the worse.
But so far, one – Mexico’s Claudia Sheinbaum – has emerged relatively unscathed.
With the US-Mexico border and the trade, drugs and migrants that cross it a focus of the Trump administration, Mexico is under intense pressure. Yet while Sheinbaum has made some concessions, she has also charmed Trump and won plaudits at home, with approval ratings that touch 80%.

Oliver Milman
The Trump administration is stripping away support for scientific research in the US and overseas that contains a word it finds particularly inconvenient: “climate.”
The US government is withdrawing grants and other support for research that even references the climate crisis, academics have said, amid Donald Trump’s blitzkrieg upon environmental regulations and clean-energy development.
Trump, who has said that the climate crisis is a “giant hoax”, has already stripped mentions of climate change and global heating from government websites and ordered a halt to programs that reference diversity, equity and inclusion. A widespread funding freeze for federally backed scientific work also has been imposed, throwing the US scientific community into chaos.
Federal workers brace for more firings after judge lifts block on Trump administration job cuts
Good morning US politics readers. Federal workers are bracing for more mass firings after a federal judge ruled that the Trump administration can continue its job-cutting drive.
The ruling came as a blow to the National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU) and four other unions, who sued last week to block the administration from firing hundreds of thousands of federal workers and granting buyouts to employees who quit voluntarily.
The ruling by the US district judge Christopher Cooper in Washington DC federal court is temporary while the litigation plays out.
Meanwhile, as Trump and his lieutenants have been touting supposed cost-savings, a top labor lawyer has warned that instead the mass downsizing of the federal workforce could tally up into a “monumental” bill and could be breaking the law.
Officials have cited “poor performance” when terminating thousands of federal workers. In many cases it’s not true, according to employees embroiled in the blitz, many of whom are now seeking legal advice.
Jacob Malcom was acting deputy assistant secretary for policy and environmental management, and director of the office of policy analysis at the US Department of Interior – until this week, when he resigned in protest against the mass firings of probationary employees.
“This is being done under the guise of ‘poor performance’ or ‘skills not aligned with needs’ but neither are true,” he told the Guardian. “First, no evidence was provided that would suggest that poor performance; in fact, I know some of the individuals that were down my chain of supervision and know they were among the best performers.
You can read the full report by Michael Sainato here:
Here’s what’s happening today:
-
Donald Trump is due to address national governors at 11am ET.
-
CPAC continues apace. Speakers today include NSA chief Mike Waltz – who told Zelenskyy to “tone down” Trump criticism – at 9.55am, Sebastian Gorka at 11.05am, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt at 5pm and homeland security secretary Kristi Noem at 7.30pm.
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