It was unclear, however, whether Alsup’s ruling would do much to stem the Trump administration’s sweeping purge of the federal workforce, as it was limited to agencies directly involved in the case. It was also not clear that the ruling would result in fired probationary employees getting their jobs back.

According toBloomberg Law, “the judge listed the National Park Service, Bureau of Land Management, the Department of Veterans Affairs, and the National Science Foundation among the agencies that are barred from engaging in layoffs ordered by OPM.”

Politiconoted that “Alsup stopped short of ordering the agencies to reinstate the fired workers or to halt looming firing,” saying he “doesn’t currently have the authority to do that.”

    • @[email protected]
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      712 hours ago

      Politiconoted that “Alsup stopped short of ordering the agencies to reinstate the fired workers or to halt looming firing,” saying he “doesn’t currently have the authority to do that.”

      I, for one, appreciate when judges know the law.

      He should’ve been more broad in preventing it in other agencies, but at least there’s precedent.

      • @[email protected]
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        212 hours ago

        Perhaps this is true, but I feel like it’s more likely he doesn’t want to push his authority any farther because, like most people times likes these, he is terrified of how everything he says and does might come back on him.

        • @[email protected]
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          111 hours ago

          Maybe. I honestly don’t know the specifics on what judges can or cannot do, but I do know I don’t want activist judges who go beyond their legal authority. So in general, I prefer restraint.