Donald Trumpâs presidential administration in court filings has for the first time acknowledged that it fired nearly 25,000 recently hired workers â and said agencies were working to bring all of them back after a judge ruled that their terminations were likely illegal.
The filings made in Baltimoreâs federal courthouse late Monday include statements from officials at 18 agencies, all of whom said the reinstated probationary workers were being placed on administrative leave at least temporarily.
The mass firings, part of Trumpâs broader purge of the federal workforce carried out by the so-called âdepartment of government efficiencyâ (Doge) led by billionaire businessman Elon Musk, were widely reported. But the court filings are the first full accounting of the terminations by the administration.
Here are the key US politics story from Monday:
Trump administration rehiring nearly 25,000 fired workers after court order
In the filings late Monday, agency officials said they had either reinstated all of the fired employees or were working to do so â but warned that bringing back large numbers of workers had imposed significant burdens and caused confusion and turmoil.
The officials also noted that an appeals court ruling reversing Bredarâs order would allow agencies to again fire the workers, subjecting them to multiple changes in their employment status in a matter of weeks.
Chief justice rebukes Trump for call to impeach judge hearing deportation case
John Roberts, the chief justice of the US supreme court, delivered a rare rebuke on Tuesday of Donald Trump after the US president demanded the impeachment of a federal judge who had issued an adverse ruling against the administration blocking the deportation of hundreds of alleged Venezuelan gang members.
Musk and Dogeâs USAid shutdown likely violated US constitution, judge rules
A federal judge on Tuesday ruled that Elon Musk and the so-called âdepartment of government efficiencyâ (Doge) likely violated the US constitution by shutting down USAid, ordering the Trump administration to reverse some of the actions it took to dismantle the agency.
Vladimir Putin agrees to 30-day halt to attacks on Ukraineâs energy grid
Vladimir Putin has agreed to a limited ceasefire that would stop Russia targeting Ukraineâs energy infrastructure after a high-stakes phone call with Donald Trump.
But the Russian leader declined to commit to a 30-day full ceasefire, a plan pitched by Trump that Ukraine agreed to last week, denting the US presidentâs hope of bringing a quick end to hostilities.
âI am a political prisonerâ: Mahmoud Khalil says heâs being targeted for political beliefs
In his first public remarks since being detained by federal immigration authorities, Palestinian activist and recent Columbia graduate, Mahmoud Khalil, spoke out against the conditions facing immigrants in US detention and said he was being targeted by the Trump administration for his political beliefs.
âI am a political prisoner,â he said in a statement provided exclusively to the Guardian.
Trump waging âsickeningâ psychological war, deported Venezuelanâs lawyer says
A lawyer for one of the Venezuelan immigrants sent from the US to a notorious mega prison in El Salvador has accused the Trump administration of waging a âsickeningâ campaign of psychological warfare against asylum seekers and migrants.
Trump fires FTCâs only two Democrats
Donald Trump fired the two Democratic commissioners on the US Federal Trade Commission on Tuesday, further blurring the lines of bipartisanship at regulatory agencies. The fired commissioners are confirmed to be Alvaro Bedoya and Rebecca Kelly Slaughter. Bedoya confirmed his firing in a post on social media.
âIâm a Commissioner at the Federal Trade Commission. The President just illegally fired me,â he wrote. âThe FTC is an independent agency founded 111 years ago to fight fraudsters and monopolists, our staff is unafraid of the Martin Shkrelis and Jeff Bezos of the world. They take them to court and they win.
âNow, the President wants the FTC to be a lap dog for his golfing buddies.â
Democrat vows to âstop Dogeâs illegal power grabâ at non-profit peace institute
A senior Democratic congressman vowed to âstop Dogeâs illegal power grabâ after operatives from Elon Muskâs so-called âdepartment of government efficiencyâ gained entry to the US Institute of Peace in Washington â an independent organization established by Congress â and forced out its leaders.
White House sparks uncertainty over fate of two major California national monuments
The White House is fueling speculation over plans to eliminate two large national monuments in California established by former president Joe Biden. Questions about the monumentsâ status arose on 15 March when a White House fact sheet dated 14 March removed references to them.
Tesla stake is no longer Elon Muskâs most valuable asset amid stock market sell-off
Elon Muskâs vast stake in Tesla is no longer his most valuable asset as the electric car company continues to endure a sharp stock market sell-off. His SpaceX stake is worth an estimated $147bn, about $20bn more than his shares in Tesla after the carmakerâs shares halved since December.
Tesla has come under stark pressure on the market since Donald Trumpâs inauguration, as it became clear that much of Muskâs attention is on his work at the so-called âdepartment of government efficiencyâ (Doge), and the new administrationâs tariff policies injected uncertainty into the economy.
What else happened today:
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Trump escalated his rhetoric against the judicial branch, saying that a federal judge who attempted to block his deportation of suspected Venezuelan gang members should be impeached.
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Despite the rhetoric, impeaching and removing federal judges is exceedingly rare, and Republicans donât appear to have the votes in the Senate.
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Claudia Sheinbaum, Mexicoâs president, asked the Trump administration not to deport their citizens to a third country, or detain them in GuantĂĄnamo Bay.
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More documents related to the assassination of John F Kennedy Jr should be released today, Trump told reporters on Monday.