The Trump administrator asks the Supreme Court to block the restitution of chance test employees.

The Trump Administration has asked the Supreme Court for an emergency stay of the order of a Judge of the District Court that 16,000 federal employees terminated in six agencies and departments were restored immediately.
The application is the last challenge to a national preliminary court order issued by a judge of the Federal District Court in response to Trump’s executive actions that remodeled the government.
Interine general lawyer Sarah Harris argues in the presentation that non -profit unions and groups that challenged the massive shots lack position, saying that they have “kidnapped the employment relationship between the federal government and its workforce.”
She states that the judge’s order also violates the separation of powers.
“This Court should not allow a single district court to delete the work of the Congress and take over control over the review of federal personnel decisions, much less does it by exceeding the limits of the scope of its equitable authority and ordering in mass,” Harris wrote.

The Supreme Court is seen in Capitol Hill in Washington, on December 17, 2024.
J. Scott Applewhite/AP, file
Harris said the Executive Office of Special Advisor and the Merit Systems Protection Board are the right places for the plaintiffs who challenge their terminations.
The Supreme Court is already weighing the emergency relief application of the administration in three cases on Trump’s executive order that ends with birth citizenship.
Disputes on the Alien enemies Law and on the dissolution of the US Agency for International Development and freezing help payments are also probably destined for the Superior Court in the coming weeks and months.
The White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement when the judge of the District Court ruled earlier this month that he was a single judge “trying to unintentionally seized the power of hiring and dismissal from the executive branch.”
“The President has the authority to exercise the power of the entire executive branch: the judges of the Singular District Court cannot abuse the power of the entire Judiciary to frustrate the president’s agenda,” Leavitt added in the declaration published in X by his deputy.
Leavitt added that the administration “will fight immediately against this absurd and unconstitutional order.”