Federal judge orders halt to Trump admin's CFPB terminations

A federal judge ordered the Trump administration to temporarily halt mass layoffs at the Consumer Financial Protections Bureau after an appeals court had previously narrowed an earlier injunction.

U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson's order comes after plaintiffs in the case, which include the CFPB Employee Association and other labor entities, accused the government of violating her earlier injunction. (Getty Images)

Jackson noted on Friday that the agency was slated to carry out a reduction in force, or RIF, of roughly 1,400 employees — which would have left just several hundred in place. 

Jackson said that within several days of an appeals order narrowing her initial injunction, CFPB employees were told the agency would do "exactly what it was told not to do," which was to carry out a RIF. 

"I’m willing to resolve it quickly, but I’m not going to let this RIF go forward until I have," she said during the Friday hearing, noting that she is "deeply concerned, given the scope and scope of action."

Justice Department lawyers had sought to appeal Jackson's order earlier this year, arguing in a filing that the injunction "improperly intrudes on the executive [branch’s] authority" and goes "far beyond what is lawful."

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Jackson blocked the administration from moving forward with any layoffs or from cutting off employees' access to computers at the bureau until she has time to hear from the officials in question later this month.

"We’re not going to disperse" more than 1,400 employees "into the universe... until we have determined that is lawful or not," Jackson said.

She proceeded to then set an April 28 hearing date to hear testimony from officials slated to carry out the RIF procedures. 

The order directed the government to "rehire all terminated employees, reinstate all terminated contracts, and refrain from engaging in reductions-in-force or attempting to stop work through any means."  (Getty Images)

The Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit stayed Jackson's order only in part, staying the provision dictating that the government must rehire the terminated employees. 

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The appeals court also stayed the provision of the order prohibiting the government from "terminating or issuing a notice of reduction" to employees the administration deemed "to be unnecessary to the performance of defendant's statutory duties."

Breanne Deppisch is a national politics reporter for Fox News Digital covering the Trump administration, with a focus on the Justice Department, FBI, and other national news. 

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