Washington — The Trump administration on Monday asked the Supreme Court to pause a lower court decision that required six agencies to reinstate more than 16,000 federal probationary workers who were terminated. The request for emergency relief from the Justice Department is the latest intervention the administration is seeking from the Supreme Court as it faces more than 100 lawsuits challenging President Trump's policies.
Main Idea: President Donald Trump asked the Supreme Court to pause a ruling that ordered six federal agencies to reinstate more than 16,000 probationary workers.
Key Points:
A pause could delay reinstating thousands of federal workers, leaving agencies short-staffed and slowing services for veterans, farmers, and other taxpayers.
A Supreme Court stay could give the administration more time to cut or reorganize federal jobs, which supporters say may reduce waste and speed policy changes.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
The federal department filing the emergency request on behalf of the administration.
Central actor behind the administration’s request to the Supreme Court and broader federal workforce actions.
The court asked to pause the reinstatement order and a central decision-maker in the dispute.
Named official who made the administration’s central legal argument in the Supreme Court filing.
One of the six agencies ordered to reinstate probationary workers.
One of the six agencies ordered to reinstate probationary workers.
One of the six agencies ordered to reinstate probationary workers.
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Sign in to commentOne of the six agencies ordered to reinstate probationary workers.
One of the six agencies ordered to reinstate probationary workers.
One of the six agencies ordered to reinstate probationary workers.
Federal agency whose authority to direct the firings is at issue in the case.
Named judge whose reinstatement order triggered the appeal and whose ruling is being challenged.