@Os Trigonum is this legal Ryan Geddie @ryangeddie.bsky.social · 6h I just lost my job, along with most of my coworkers, due to the illegal grant freeze. I worked at an organization that -helped veterans who have lost a limb -Assisted elderly and disabled people -Helped hospitals better treat people who have lost limbs
It's almost wildfire season Let's freeze all firefighter hiring Government by Musk - Trump https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/trumps-freeze-stalls-federal-firefighter-hiring-rcna191001 I guess when they promised to burn it all down... etc
Federal judge allows Trump to push forward with buyouts for government workers after 65K accept offers https://nypost.com/2025/02/12/us-ne...-forward-with-buyouts-for-government-workers/' excerpt: A federal judge on Wednesday declined to pause the Trump administration’s buyout program for government workers, giving President Trump a key win in his push to shrink the size of the federal government. US District Judge George A. O’Toole ruled that the union groups suing to block the so-called “Deferred Resignation” program lacked standing and that his Massachusetts-based court lacked the jurisdiction to proceed with the lawsuit. O’Toole, an appointee of former President Bill Clinton, temporarily blocked the Office of Personnel Management from moving ahead with the program earlier this week, after unions representing more than 800,000 federal workers charged that that the buyout offers were unlawful. “The plaintiffs here are not directly impacted by the directive,” the judge ruled. “Instead, they allege that the directive subjects them to upstream effects including a diversion of resources to answer members’ questions about the directive, a potential loss of membership, and possible reputational harm.” “The unions do not have the required direct stake in the Fork Directive, but are challenging a policy that affects others, specifically executive branch employees,” O’Toole continued. “This is not sufficient.” OPM had given some 2 million federal workers unwilling to comply with a return-to-office mandate a Feb. 6 deadline to accept about eight months of pay and benefits in exchange for their resignations. The agency further warned that the buyout offer would not be extended past the deadline and that workers choosing to stay put should expect downsizing, restructurings, realignments and workforce reductions under Trump. About 65,000 federal workers have accepted the deal, according to the White House. more at the link
link will work for everyone https://www.wsj.com/politics/policy...d?st=LH8oDb&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink This Spending Fight Is Actually About the Constitution With unilateral freezes and cuts, Trump is testing how far he can encroach on Congress’s power of the purse By Greg Ip Feb. 21, 2025 at 5:30 am ET As Washington gears up for epic negotiations over taxes and spending, another fiscal fight is unfolding in the background. This one isn’t about how much to spend, but about who controls that spending: Congress or the president? The Constitution assigns power of the purse to Congress. But in his early actions and words, President Trump is taking more of that power for himself. Rather than propose a budget, then wait for Congress to legislate actual spending, his administration froze a swath of federal grants (though it walked that back), cut other spending, such as on medical research overhead and foreign aid, and idled entire agencies. Trump allies like Russell Vought, budget director in Trump’s first and current term, have long argued the president should have more discretion to spend—or not—as he sees fit. If Congress and the courts go along with that view, it would represent a generational shift in power from the legislative to the executive branch. The president would emerge with much more freedom to pursue policies at odds with Congress’s intent. Republicans hope this will yield savings to reduce the deficit and finance tax cuts. But the real issue isn’t the scale of spending; it’s whose priorities govern that spending. Trump’s team wants to restore what they consider the president’s rightful say over the nation’s finances, especially the countless programs funded through annual appropriations. Appropriations bills aren’t glamorous. But they are the one chance Congress gets each year to evaluate and direct the executive branch, said Eloise Pasachoff, a law professor at Georgetown University. “That’s why appropriations laws are thousands of pages. It’s not just sums of money. It’s conditions, and set-asides, and carve-outs. If the president starts to say we are not bound by appropriations laws and Congress sort of blesses it, it’s another step toward an imperial executive which…the founders were pretty emphatic we shouldn’t have.” Legislative control of the purse can be traced to the Glorious Revolution in 17th-century England, when the king agreed to parliamentary supremacy on expenditure and taxation. The American framers enshrined that principle in the U.S. Constitution, which says, “No Money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law.” This is usually interpreted as requiring the president to spend what Congress appropriates. Trump allies disagree. “Until the Presidency of Richard Nixon, it was overwhelmingly understood that the power of the purse restricted only the President’s ability to spend more than an appropriation—it was not understood to prohibit the President from spending less than an appropriation,” Mark Paoletta co-wrote in an article last year for the Center for Renewing America, a think tank founded by Vought. Paoletta is now general counsel for the White House Office of Management and Budget. He cited numerous examples before Nixon of “impoundment”—presidents refusing to spend appropriated funds—such as Thomas Jefferson impounding $50,000 for gunboats on the Mississippi during negotiations over the Louisiana Purchase. In 1974 Congress, angry at Nixon’s many impoundments, explicitly prohibited the practice with the Impoundment Control Act. It included escape clauses: The president can ask Congress to rescind spending (a “rescission”) or he can defer spending to later in the fiscal year, while notifying Congress. Rarely has either been used. Vought considers the Impoundment Control Act an unconstitutional infringement on the president’s powers. But the Supreme Court has twice slapped down the president for deviating from legislated spending: in 1975 in a case over environmental spending, and in 1998 when it ruled the “line-item veto”—allowing the president to veto parts, rather than the entirety, of a bill—unconstitutional. Presidents can still influence spending without impoundment, such as deciding which drugs and procedures programs like Medicare and Medicaid will cover. And for practical reasons, sometimes money can’t or shouldn’t be spent as prescribed; perhaps a flood prevents a bridge from being built. The controversy arises when the president actually defies Congress, such as when President Obama made Affordable Care Act payments to health insurers and Trump raided Pentagon funds to build a border wall. Both episodes triggered separation-of-powers court cases. President Biden’s cancellation of student debt was a breathtaking exercise of fiscal fiat, which the Supreme Court ruled illegal. Perhaps the biggest controversy arose during Trump’s first term when he held up military aid to Ukraine while pressuring its president, Volodymyr Zelensky, to investigate Joe Biden’sfamily. Congress’s investigative arm, the Government Accountability Office, later ruled that an illegal impoundment. At his confirmation hearing last month, Vought disputed that finding. “We were engaged in a policy process with regard to how funding would flow to Ukraine. We released the funding by the end of the fiscal year,” he said. Rather than challenge the constitutionality of the Impoundment Control Act outright, the administration for now is testing the limits of what it can do under current law. “Temporary pauses on the disbursement of federal funds are commonplace,” it said last month in response to a lawsuit against its sweeping funding freeze. District Judge Loren AliKhanwasn’t having it, ruling the administration “attempted to wrest the power of the purse away from the only branch of government entitled to wield it.” Philip Wallach, who studies the separation of powers for the American Enterprise Institute, said Trump’s intent is to “essentially eliminate various parts of the government. And pretty quickly you get into something that looks like a de facto impoundment, even if they never call it that.” Democrats are alarmed. They pressed Vought at his confirmation on whether he would disburse funds Congress has already approved, such as $3.8 billion in remaining security assistance to Ukraine. Vought said, “I’m not going to get ahead of the policy process.” Sen. Gary Peters (D., Mich.) asked, “How will Congress be able to negotiate in good faith if the president is simply able to disregard the bipartisan laws that are passed through the appropriation process? How do we negotiate with someone who says, ‘I’m just going to do what I want. To hell with the Constitution’?” Sen. Rand Paul (R., Ky.) was more relaxed, telling reporters this week that Democrats seem angrier at Elon Musk personally rather than the waste his Department of Government Efficiency has identified. But Paul, a constitutional stickler, said for Musk’s savings to count, they should be “bundled into a rescission package and sent back to Congress.” And to constrain the president from moving money around, he told his colleagues last month, “We’ve got to write better legislation.”
I hope your life works out and your companies AP doesn't get quashed by AI......good luck, enjoy the time away. You will not be missed. DD