Washington — A federal judge on Friday declined to block the Trump administration from putting thousands of employees with U.S. Agency for International Development on administrative leave and recalling others from overseas, clearing the way for the president to resume his efforts to overhaul the agency as part of his plans to slash the size of the federal government.
U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols, appointed by President Trump, denied a request for a preliminary injunction sought by two labor unions that represent members of the Foreign Service and civilian employees. Nichols had issued a temporary order earlier this month that prevented the administration from placing thousands of USAID employees on administrative leave and evacuating workers from overseas posts, and ordered the Trump administration to reinstate USAID workers who had already been placed on leave.
But in turning down the request for the preliminary injunction, Nichols now allows the Trump administration to resume those efforts.
In a 26-page decision, the judge said that the employment-related injuries asserted by the unions did not warrant the remedy of emergency relief that they had sought. He said the Justice Department had persuaded the court that the risk to USAID employees placed on administrative leave is “far more minimal than it initially appeared.”
“Plaintiffs have presented no irreparable harm they or their members are imminently likely to suffer from the hypothetical future dissolution of USAID,” Nichols wrote, adding that those employees who are likely to be put on leave can address their concerns with the applicable government body for employee complaints.
He added that complaints from the unions about the effects on their members stemming from being placed on leave and asked to return to the U.S. are “archetypal complaints about changed employment conditions and their follow-on effects — which at this point appear to be largely financial.”
The judge also noted that federal laws allow domestic USAID employees or their union representative to object to being placed on administrative leave, indicating that the district court likely lacks jurisdiction over the unions’ claims.
Nichols found that the Trump administration had made a justifiable case that the actions at issue in the case “are essential to its policy goals.”
Despite the unions’ argument that USAID workers currently overseas had been stranded and locked out of computer systems, at times in dangerous situations, Nichols found that protections in place to keep workers stationed overseas safe were adequate, based on declarations from current USAID leadership.
- In:
- USAID
- Trump Administration
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