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Tag: executive order

Trump Strips Civil Service Protections from 8,000 Senior Federal Workers

President Trump signed an executive order on June 3, 2026 reclassifying approximately 8,000 senior federal workers — nearly all at the GS-15 pay grade — into a new "Schedule Policy/Career" category that makes them at-will employees who can be fired without cause. The affected positions include policy directors, chiefs of staff, senior advisers, public affairs officials, and grant managers. The administration framed the move as accountability reform; critics called it a politically motivated purge designed to replace qualified career officials with loyalists. The order is already subject to legal challenges, and Democrats introduced the Saving the Civil Service Act to block the reclassification.

civil service
federal workers
executive order
4 statements

Federal Judge Allows Trump's Mail-In Voting Executive Order to Stand

On May 28, 2026, U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols — a Trump appointee in Washington, D.C. — declined to temporarily block President Trump's March 31 executive order directing the Department of Homeland Security and Social Security Administration to build citizenship lists for mail ballot eligibility. Nichols ruled it was premature to block the order because it has not yet been implemented. The executive order directs DHS to compile lists of confirmed adult U.S. citizens in each state, with the U.S. Postal Service then delivering mail ballots only to verified citizens. Democrats and voting rights groups sued immediately, arguing the order risks disenfranchising millions of lawfully registered voters because the underlying data can be outdated or contain errors. A parallel legal challenge filed by a coalition of Democratic-led states is pending before U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani in Boston, who was scheduled to hear arguments June 2. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer led Democratic condemnation of both the order and the ruling.

voting rights
mail-in voting
executive order
2 statements