U.S. District Judge George A. O’Toole Jr. dissolved his restraining order blocking the "deferred resignations" program after finding the plaintiffs lacked legal standing.
Summary
A federal judge in Boston has lifted a temporary freeze on the Trump administration’s "fork in the road" program, which offers mass buyouts to millions of federal workers.
U.S. District Judge George A. O’Toole Jr. ruled that labor unions challenging the plan lacked legal standing, as they were not directly impacted.
The unions argued the program could harm their membership and reputation, but the judge found these concerns insufficient.
With the ruling, the administration’s unprecedented resignation incentive can now proceed.
A few weeks before the election Trump and Musk had a publicly available sit down in which they talked about how much they hated unions and how worker rights just got in their way.
And then working class Americans came out in the millions and voted for them.
THAT is how stupid Americans are.
The worker rights that took generations to acquire and that people literally died for....well, you can kiss them all goodbye.
They lack standing?? They stand to not get paid when Congress never appropriates the money they never previously discussed spending for this idiocy! Gimme a break.
We're a few years past them just making up standing for cases they want to push through and just gaslighting about there being no standing for case they want shut down.
There was no legal standing in the case that shut down student loan forgiveness, but that didn't matter because they were shutting down something they disliked. It's the opposite here, while they clearly have standing, they'll just be told they don't by some asshat who just cares for having power over others.
Honestly, this is the one I'm least worried about. It doesn't sound like anyone who wasn't about to retire is taking the deal. I'm more worried about congressionally allocated funding being impounded, federal bureaucrats being illegally fired, and Doge's massive security breaches in the Treasury and IRS.