
A federal judge has temporarily blocked the Trump administration’s move to lay off thousands of federal employees during the ongoing government shutdown — a sweeping plan that had already cost roughly 4,000 workers their jobs. The emergency order, issued today, pauses additional terminations while the court reviews whether the layoffs violate federal labor and employment laws.
The case stems from a lawsuit filed by multiple unions, arguing that the administration overstepped its authority by firing workers while government operations remain unfunded. The unions claim the move not only breaks existing labor protections but also undermines public safety by thinning the federal workforce in critical agencies.
White House officials, led by acting chief of staff Kash Patel, have defended the layoffs as part of the president’s broader push to “cut waste and streamline Washington,” projecting up to 10,000 job losses if the shutdown continues. The administration says the reductions are necessary to offset costs tied to what it calls “Democrat-run programs” that would otherwise remain unfunded.
The court’s decision injects fresh urgency into the three-week shutdown standoff, deepening tensions between Congress and the White House as hundreds of thousands of unpaid workers brace for uncertainty — and Washington faces its most volatile political and economic moment in years.






















































