President Donald Trump, the left, refers to gestures as accompanied by the Air Force, Colonel Angela Ochoa, commander of the twenty -ninth air wing, at the center, walking from the navy before the Air Force, the rise, on Friday, February 28, 2025, at the joint base Andrews, PhD in medicine.
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WASHINGTON – The head of the Federal Agency for the upcoming Losak died in his job, a judge in Washington on Saturday, saying that President Donald Trump’s attempt to remove the Special Adviser is illegal.
The American boycott judge, Amy Berman Jackson, stood with Hampton delinger, who leads the office of the Special Adviser, in a legal battle on the president’s authority to topple the head of the independent agency, which is likely to return to the US Supreme Court.

Filed a lawsuit against Delinger Trump last month after his expulsion, although the law says that private lawyers can be removed by the president “only for incompetence, neglecting duty, or bad violations in his position.” Jackson, who was nominated on the bench by Democratic President Barack Obama, has quickly restored Delling in the job while following his case.
Jackson rejected the Trump administration’s allegations that protecting the removal of a private lawyer is unconstitutional because it prevents the president from installing the preferred agency head.
The judge said that allowing the president to remove the Special Adviser at Will will have a chilling effect on his decisive duties, which includes guarding the federal workforce from illegal employees, such as revenge for the informants.
Jackson wrote in its decision: “The private lawyer is supposed to resist the winds of political change and help ensure that there is no government employee in any of the two parties as a subject of prohibited employment practices or revenge faces to summon violations – through a job from a previous administration or by officials in the new,” Jackson wrote in its decision.
The Ministry of Justice has quickly submitted the papers of the court, which indicates that it will challenge the ruling before the Federal Appeal Court in Washington. The case has already rose once to the Supreme Court, which previously allowed Delngers to remain in his job.
This ruling comes at a time when Delinger defies the removal of test workers who have been separated as part of the Trump administration’s comprehensive reform. On Tuesday, a federal council suspended the termination of many test workers after Delngers said that the shooting may be illegal.

“I am happy and enjoyable to see the court emphasizing the importance and legitimacy of protecting the jobs that Congress granted my position,” Delling said in a statement on Saturday. “My efforts to protect federal employees in general, and with violations in particular, from illegal treatment will continue.”
The judge said that his own lawyer is a “unique status and mission”, which requires independence from the president to ensure that he is able to implement his responsibilities. The office investigates the claims of those whose violations, can follow up on disciplinary measures against employees who punish those informed of violations and provide a channel for employees to reveal government violations.
“If I do not have independence, if I can remove me without a good reason, federal employees will not have any good reason to come to me,” Dellenger told reporters outside the Federal Court in Washington after a recent session.
The office of the Special Adviser is also responsible for the implementation of the opening law, which restricts the party political activities of government workers. The shooting of the Trump administration staff described their support on social media for its policies, although the opening law aims to restrict the political call during service.
The Ministry of Justice used a comprehensive language in urging the Supreme Court last month to allow the end of the head of a mysterious federal agency with limited power. Acting lawyer Sarah Harris wrote in the papers of the court that the lower court had crossed a “constitutional red line” by preventing the release of Delinger and Trump’s suspension “from forming the agenda of an executive branch agency in the first days of the new heat.
Delinger was appointed by Democratic President Joe Biden and confirmed by the Senate for a period of five years in 2024.