
Trump layoffs appeal falls on deaf ears
Protesters show what's at stake in April outside the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta as mass layoffs of 10,000 staff at health agencies begin. File photo: Reuters
A US appeals court has refused to pause a judge's ruling blocking President Donald Trump's administration from carrying out mass layoffs of federal workers and a restructuring of government agencies as part of a sweeping government overhaul.
The decision on Friday by the San Francisco-based Ninth US Circuit Court of Appeals means that, for now, the Trump administration cannot proceed with plans to shed tens of thousands of federal jobs and shutter many government offices and programs.
US district judge Susan Illston in San Francisco on May 22 blocked large-scale layoffs at about 20 federal agencies, agreeing with a group of unions, nonprofits and municipalities that the president may only restructure agencies when authorized by Congress.
A three-judge Ninth Circuit panel denied the Trump administration's bid to stay Illston's decision pending an appeal, which could take months to resolve. The administration will likely now ask the Supreme Court to pause the ruling. (Reuters)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Going after Lip-Bu Tan, Malaysian-American CEO of Intel, is just the beginning
Want to be a CEO in America? Try not to look too Chinese or have a name that sounds Chinese. Lip-Bu Tan, the new chief executive of chipmaking giant Intel, finds to his dismay that out of nowhere, top United States politicians up to President Donald Trump have declared him a threat to national security. Trump tweeted last week on his Truth Social platform: 'The CEO of INTEL is highly CONFLICTED and must resign, immediately. There is no other solution to this problem.' Immediately? Why the urgency? The president didn't say. What evidence is there that Tan was such a threat to America? Trump didn't present any. It appears that he was paraphrasing Republican Senator Tom Cotton, who earlier wrote to Intel's board chair expressing 'concern about the security and integrity of Intel's operations' and Tan's ties to China. Tan is Malaysian, studied in Singapore and received his degrees from MIT. He has long been a US citizen. Cotton accused him of having extensive investments in China. Well, name me a Wall Street or Silicon Valley titan in the past quarter of a century who didn't have investment or business in China. Elon Musk? Apple? BlackRock? You may remember Cotton's infamous grilling of TikTok's CEO Chew Shou Zi during a Senate hearing in February last year. Many people described his antics as racist. 'Senator, I'm Singaporean,' Chew pleaded, but Cotton kept asking whether he was a Chinese national, and a member of the Chinese Communist Party, and then demanded to examine his passport for proof of citizenship. With Tan, though, the more serious charge Cotton has levelled is that Cadence Design Systems – a San Jose-based firm that Tan headed between 2009 and 2021 – last month agreed to pay US$140 million to resolve charges that it violated export controls by selling chip design products to China's National University of Defence Technology with ties to, as the name suggests, the Chinese military.


RTHK
7 hours ago
- RTHK
Germany's Merz faces discord after busy first 100 days
Germany's Merz faces discord after busy first 100 days Chancellor Friedrich Merz faces a tough balancing act to repair the cracks in his coalition government. File photo: Reuters German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has driven sweeping changes in security, economic and migration policy during his first 100 days in office, but faces widening cracks in his uneasy coalition. "Germany is back," Merz said, vowing to revive the economy, the military and Berlin's international standing after what he labelled three lacklustre years under his centre-left predecessor Olaf Scholz. He vowed to build "Europe's largest conventional army" in the face of a hostile Russia and keep up strong support for Ukraine in lockstep with Paris and London. And he has pressed a crackdown on irregular migration, a sharp departure from the centrist course of his long-time party rival Angela Merkel. But his personal approval rating slipped 10 points to just 32 percent in the latest poll by public broadcaster ARD. The biggest coalition crisis came last month over the nomination of three new judges to Germany's highest court, in which a campaign against one of the nominees eventually led to Merz's Christian Democrats (CDU) withdrawing support and postponing the vote. The next sign of trouble was when the CDU's Bavarian sister party demanded sharp cuts to social benefits for Ukrainian refugees, a position its coalition partner, the Social Democratic Party, opposes. Both coalition partners know that open squabbling will turn off voters after discord brought down Scholz's three-party coalition, and play into the hands of the far-right Alternative for Germany Party. (AFP)


South China Morning Post
10 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Armenians call Trump-brokered Azerbaijan peace deal ‘surrender document'
The streets were almost deserted in Yerevan on Saturday because of the summer heat, but at shaded parks and fountains, Armenians struggled to make sense of what the accord signed a day earlier in Washington means for them. The leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan, two countries in the Caucasus involved in a territorial conflict since the fall of the Soviet Union, met on Friday and signed a peace treaty under the watch of US President Donald Trump. In Yerevan, however, few people were enthusiastic. 'It's a good thing that this document was signed because Armenia has no other choice,' said Asatur Srapyan, an 81-year-old retiree. He believes Armenia hasn't achieved much with this draft agreement, but it's a step in the right direction. 'We are very few in number, we don't have a powerful army, we don't have a powerful ally behind us, unlike Azerbaijan,' he said. 'This accord is a good opportunity for peace.'