Trump administration wants the Supreme Court to let the firing of
whistleblower agency head proceed
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[February 17, 2025]
By MARK SHERMAN and LINDSAY WHITEHURST
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration wants the Supreme Court to
permit the firing of the head of the federal agency dedicated to
protecting whistleblowers, according to documents obtained Sunday that
would mark the first appeal to the justices since President Donald Trump
took office.
The emergency appeal is the start of what probably will be a steady
stream from lawyers for the Republican president and his administration
seeking to undo lower court rulings that have slowed his second term
agenda.
The Justice Department's filing obtained by The Associated Press asks
the conservative-majority court to lift a judge’s court order
temporarily reinstating Hampton Dellinger as the leader of the Office of
Special Counsel.
Dellinger has argued that the law says he can only be dismissed for
problems with the performance of his job, none of which were cited in
the email dismissing him.
The petition came hours after a divided appeals court panel refused on
procedural grounds to lift the order, which was filed Wednesday and
expires on Feb. 26.
The case is not expected to be docketed until after the Supreme Court
returns from the Presidents Day holiday weekend. The justices would not
act until Tuesday at the earliest.
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It’s not clear what reception Trump will get from the
conservative-dominated court that includes three justices he nominated
in his first term.
The case began last week when Dellinger sued over his removal as head of
the Office of Special Counsel, which is responsible for guarding the
federal workforce from illegal personnel actions, such as retaliation
for whistleblowing. He was appointed by Democratic President Joe Biden
and confirmed by the Senate to a five-year term in 2024.
Dellinger said the office’s work “needed now more than ever,” noting the
“unprecedented” number of firings, without cause, of federal employees
with civil service protections in recent weeks by the Trump
administration.
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President Donald Trump walks from the Oval Office to departing on
Marine One from the South Lawn of the White House, Friday, Feb. 14,
2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
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The administration argues that the order reinstating Dellinger for
two weeks wrongly restricts what the president can do. The brief
cites the Supreme Court decision that gave Trump immunity from
criminal prosecution and reflected a muscular view of executive
power.
“Until now, as far as we are aware, no court in American history has
wielded an injunction to force the president to retain an agency
head,” acting Solicitor General Sarah M. Harris wrote.
The brief references some of the dozen or more cases where judges
have slowed Trump’s agenda, including by ordering the temporary
lifting of a foreign aid funding freeze and blocking workers with
Elon Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency team from
accessing Treasury Department data for now.
The executive branch has argued since the Carter administration that
the Office of Special Counsel is the kind of job where the president
should have the power to hire and fire, and letting the order in
Dellinger's case stand could “embolden” judges to issue additional
blocks in the roughly 70 lawsuits the Trump administration is facing
so far, the Justice Department argues.
Dellinger’s firing was the latest move in Trump’s sweeping effort to
shrink and reshape the federal government, testing the limits of
well-established civil service protections by moving to dismantle
federal agencies and push out staffers.
The independent Office of Special Counsel is separate from Justice
Department special counsels such as Jack Smith, who are appointed by
the attorney general for specific investigations, such as Smith's
criminal investigation of Trump before he returned to the White
House.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
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