Justice Department filings in a Maryland case provide previously unseen details of the Trump administration's mass firings.
The records filed in federal court in Maryland late Monday span 18 agencies and mark the most comprehensive accounting to ...
The Trump administration has moved to reinstate at least 24,500 recently fired probationary workers following a pair of ...
Roughly 15,500 reinstatements were a direct result of the district court order, while roughly 6,000 workers were already ...
Probationary employees at the CFPB, HUD and other federal agencies had their jobs restored temporarily in two court rulings ...
A federal judge in Maryland found the Trump administration acted unlawfully in firing thousands of federal employees by not ...
Maryland Sen. Chris Van Hollen is troubled by what the Trump administration’s cuts to the federal workforce mean for veterans ...
Even as the Trump administration continues its campaign to fire government workers, a judge’s ruling and a White House plea ...
Some Alaska employees received a letter they would be “reinstated” according to a federal court order, but placed on paid, ...
The ruling from Judge James K. Bredar, in the U.S. District of Maryland, grants a temporary restraining order for 14 days and requires that workers be temporarily reinstated at more than a dozen ...
U.S. District Judge James K. Bredar, an Obama appointee, issued a 14-day stay in a case brought by 20 Democratic attorneys general representing the District of Columbia, Maryland, and 18 other states.