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Trump asks the Supreme Court to allow its government to reduce the plans to continue

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Washington (AP) – The government of President Donald Trump asked the Supreme Court on Friday to allow him to resume his reduction in the federal employees, while a lawsuit was submitted by unions and cities.

The Ministry of Justice questions a command that was issued last week by a federal judge in San Francisco, who temporarily hired Trump’s efforts to reduce a federal government that he inflated and referred to.

The transient injunction from US district judge Susan Illston questioned whether Trump’s Republican administration acted lawfully in order to record the federal employee.

Illston, a representative of the democratic President Bill Clinton, instructed numerous federal authorities to hire the Trump workforce in February, and a subsequent memo that was published by the Ministry of Efficiency and the Office for Personnel Management.

The Attorney General D. John Sauer asked the court to quickly put the judgment on hold and told the judges that Illston had exceeded their authority.

The order from Illston will run next week, unless expanded.

The case is the youngest in a number of appeals that the Trump administration submitted to the Supreme Court, including some in connection with burnings. The administration has separately appealed at the 9th US Court of Appeals in San Francisco that has not yet been acted.

Tens of thousands of federal workers have been released, left their work through postponed resignation programs or, due to Trump’s state efforts. There is no official number for the work cuts, but at least 75,000 federal employees have taken up resignation, and thousands of probationists have already been released.

In her order, Illston gave several examples to show the effects of downsizing. A union that represents the federal assistant who examined the health risks taking into account the workers said that it was ready to lose 221 out of 222 workers in the office in Pittsburgh. A farmer in Vermont did not receive timely inspection on his property in order to receive disaster support after flooding and miss an essential plant window. A reduction in employees of the social security management has led to longer waiting times for recipients.

Among the agencies affected by the transient injunction are the departments for agriculture, energy, work, interior, state, financial and veteran affairs. It also applies to the National Science Foundation, Small Business Association, Social Security Administration and Environmental Protection Agency.

The plaintiffs include the cities of San Francisco, Chicago and Baltimore; The Labor Group American Federation of Government Officer; And the non -profit groups Alliance for Renttired Americans, Center for Taxpayer Rights and Coalition to protect the America National Parks.

Some of the unions and non -profit groups are also plaintiffs in another complaint in front of a judge in San Francisco who questions the mass shots of probation workers. In this case, judge William as -up to the government in March ordered these workers to reintroduce, but the Supreme Court of the United States later blocked its arrangement.

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