US Supreme Court upholds pause on Trump firing watchdog head ()

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The Sun World
· 1 month ago
US Supreme Court upholds pause on Trump firing watchdog head

<img src="https://thesun.my/binrepository/400x500/0c67/400d225/none/11808/LIHP/2025-02-21t232436z-1591148000-rc2qtcai2qdk-rtrmadp-3-usa-trump-lawsuit-firing_4994276_20250222144939.jpg"><p><b>WASHINGTON</b>: The US Supreme Court on Friday temporarily blocked a request from Donald Trump to allow him to fire the head of a whistleblower protection agency, weighing in on the president's executive actions for the first time since his inauguration.</p><p>The decision, however, noted that the court could return to the demand next week, when a trial judge's temporary restraining order keeping the watchdog official in office was due to expire.</p><p>“The application to vacate the order... is held in abeyance until February 26, when the TRO is set to expire,“ the unsigned Supreme Court decision said.</p><p>The Trump administration had asked the Supreme Court to allow the president to fire Hampton Dellinger, who leads the Office of Special Counsel.</p><p>It was Trump's first appeal to the top court since returning to office and issuing a flurry of contested executive orders.</p><p>The White House fired Dellinger, head of the Office of Special Counsel, on February 7 but the lawyer sued the president and a district court ordered he be reinstated.</p><p>The US Court of Appeals had rejected the Trump administration's request to overrule the decision.</p><p>The emergency appeal filed to the Supreme Court on Sunday branded this an “unprecedented assault on the separation of powers that warrants immediate relief.”</p><p>The Supreme Court, which includes three Trump-nominated justices, is primed to play a significant role in what some experts are suggesting is a looming constitutional crisis as the president tests the limits of his executive power.</p><p>Trump, who began his second term last month, has launched a campaign led by one of his top donors, Elon Musk, to downsize or dismantle swaths of the US government.</p>

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