US judge keeps Trump plan to push out federal workers on hold

President Donald Trump arrives on the South Lawn of the White House, in Washington, Monday, Feb. 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana) (Jose Luis Magana)

BOSTON ā€“ President Donald Trump's plan to downsize the federal workforce remains on hold after a courtroom hearing on Monday afternoon.

It's the latest example of how the Republican president's ambitious plans have become ensnared in the judicial system.

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U.S. District Judge George Oā€™Toole Jr. had paused the deferred resignation program, commonly described as a buyout, last week.

On Monday, he said the stay would remain in place until he issues a ruling. It's unclear when that could happen.

Trump wants to use financial incentives to encourage government employees to quit. According to the White House, 65,000 workers had taken the government up on its offer as of Friday.

He criticized people who want to keep working remotely while talking with reporters in the Oval Office on Monday.

ā€œNobody is gonna work from home,ā€ Trump said. "They are gonna be going out, theyā€™re gonna play tennis, theyā€™re gonna play golf, theyā€™re gonna do a lot of things. Theyā€™re not working.ā€

The deferred resignation program has been spearheaded by Elon Musk, who is serving as Trumpā€™s top adviser for reducing federal spending. Under the plan, employees can stop working and get paid until Sept. 30.

But labor unions said the plan is illegal. They asked for O'Toole to keep it on hold and prevent the Office of Personnel Management, or OPM, from soliciting more workers to sign up.

Elena Goldstein, speaking for the workers, said there were ā€œserious questionsā€ about the plan's rationale and legality.

ā€œOPM seems to making this up as they are going along,ā€ she said.

She said the program was an ā€œunprecedented actionā€ on an ā€œunprecedented timeline," and she described it as a pretext to remove workers and replace them with people aligned with the administration.

Eric Hamilton, a Justice Department lawyer, called the plan a ā€œhumane off rampā€ for federal employees who may have structured their lives around working remotely and have been ordered to return to government buildings.

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Megerian reported from Washington.


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