News

Nearly two thirds of the DOJ unit defending key Trump cases in court have quit or are leaving their jobs, new analysis shows.
The court has supported his administration on issues like immigration, federal employee dismissals and military policies.
WASHINGTON − An ideologically divided Supreme Court on July 14 allowed the Trump administration to fire hundreds of workers ...
Seven lawyers who spoke with Reuters cited a punishing workload and the need to defend policies that some felt were not ...
The Supreme Court on Monday agreed to pause a lower court order that required the Department of Education to reinstate nearly ...
In yet another unsigned ruling, the conservative majority treated a department closure like it’s just some minor layoffs.
A U.S. district judge in San Francisco had temporarily blocked large-scale federal layoffs known as "reductions in force." ...
The Trump administration is moving full-steam ahead with plans to gut the Education Department after getting a green light from the Supreme Court. Conservatives are in celebration mode ...
The majority did not explain its decision in the brief, unsigned order. The court's three liberal justices opposed the order.
Scholars and practitioners examine the Court’s most important regulatory decisions of this past term.
Federal agencies can resume implementing President Trump’s mass layoff directive following Tuesday’s Supreme Court ruling, greenlighting agencies to take their first steps in booting thousands of ...