Unions say White House plans mass layoff at Interior Department, despite court order

Unions representing federal employees say the Trump administration is planning to conduct mass firings at the Interior Department despite a court order temporarily blocking layoffs during the shutdown.

The disclosure came amid a legal fight between the administration and two federal employee unions — the American Federation of Government Employees and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees — which sued to block what they call “politically driven RIFs,” or reductions in force.

In a declaration filed with the court late Thursday, the plaintiffs’ attorney Danielle Leonard wrote that “multiple credible sources” said that the Interior Department was actively preparing to lay off thousands of employees starting Monday.

“This immediately raised concerns regarding compliance with this Court’s order,” Leonard wrote in a declaration. When the plaintiffs asked government lawyers about the claim Thursday afternoon, a Justice Department attorney responded that “consistent with the Court’s order, we will produce the required information tomorrow.”

In response, U.S. District Judge Susan Illston agreed to move up the deadline she had imposed on the government to provide the court with “an accounting of all RIFs, actual or imminent, that are enjoined by this [temporary restraining order].”

Illston has now asked the government to provide, by 2 p.m. ET Friday, details on the number of employees affected and a description of the programs and activities targeted for cuts.

Earlier this week, the Trump administration had informed the court that federal agencies had begun the RIF process at eight different agencies, affecting just over 4,000 people. The slight downward revision from what the administration had provided last Friday included the disclosure that roughly 800 employees within the Department of Health and Human Services were erroneously issued layoff notices.

Donald Trump listens to other speakers after delivering remarks during an event in the Oval Office of the White House on October 16.
Donald Trump listens to other speakers after delivering remarks during an event in the Oval Office of the White House on October 16. (Kevin Dietsch | Getty Images)

The declaration, from Office of Management and Budget senior advisor Stephen Billy, emphasized that “the situation… is fluid and rapidly evolving.”

After a hearing on Wednesday, Illston granted the unions a temporary restraining order, halting the Oct. 10 layoff notices and preventing new firings until a hearing on a permanent injunction, scheduled for Oct. 28.Illston characterized the Trump administration’s approach to the RIFs as “ready, fire, aim” in the Wednesday hearing and said the administration was seeking to take advantage of the lapse in funding “to assume that that all bets are off, that the laws don’t apply to them anymore, and that they can impose the structures that they like on a government situation that they don’t like.”

In response, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt called Illston “another far left, partisan judge.”

Speaking to reporters on Thursday, Leavitt added that the White House is confident their actions are legal and called the layoffs “an unfortunate consequence” of the government shutdown.

 

President Trump commutes the prison sentence of George Santos

The disgraced New York Republican was sentenced to more than seven years in prison after pleading guilty to a litany of federal charges, including wire fraud and identity theft.

Trump administration asks Supreme Court to allow National Guard deployment in Illinois

The Trump administration filed an appeal to the Supreme Court on Friday, asking it to lift lower-court rulings blocking Trump from deploying National Guard troops in Illinois.

What we know about the devastating storm in Western Alaska

The remnant of Typhoon Halong slammed the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, an area in Western Alaska hundreds of miles from the U.S. road system. More than a thousand people are displaced.

Prince Andrew drops Duke of York title as Epstein fallout continues

Prince Andrew has agreed with King Charles to stop using his Duke of York title, as scrutiny over his past connection to Jeffrey Epstein persists.

OpenAI blocks MLK Jr. videos on Sora after ‘disrespectful depictions’

OpenAI is preventing people from making AI videos of King on its Sora app after the estate of the civil rights leader complained about the spread of offensive and vulgar portrayals.

Katrina changed how jails deal with natural disasters. 20 years later, challenges remain

A survivor tells his experience of being jailed in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina, while officials and experts look at jails and natural disasters today.

More Front Page Coverage