Judge Rules Against Labor Unions Seeking to Block Mass Firings

On Thursday, a federal judge denied an effort by the trade unions to prevent the Trump administration’s efforts to reduce the size of the federal labor force significantly, allowing the continued shooting in all multiple agencies.
In the ruling, Judge Christopher R. Cooperfor An American local court judge in Washington, He indicated that he was concerned about the turmoil caused by the Trump administration’s actions. But he did not address the legitimacy of efforts to reduce its size, as he wrote that the federal court was not the right place for the conflict.
Judge Cooper wrote: “The first month of President Trump’s second administration was defined through an attack from the executive measures that caused, some say through design, disruption and even chaos in American society on a large scale.”
However, he said: “Federal provinces are linked to the report of legal cases based on the equal application of law and precedents-regardless of the identity of the litigants, or unfortunately, sometimes the consequences of their rulings on ordinary persons.”
Judge Cooper said that he was refusing to request unions to block the Trump administration from continuing its efforts to reduce its size because the issue should be addressed for the first time with the agency that governs labor conflicts between federal employee unions and administration, known as the Federal Labor Relations Authority.
Judge Cooper indicated that if the unions are lost in this place, they can appeal the battle of the court through the Federal Appeal Court.
Judge Cooper’s ruling in the case was similar to the case Those who were filed in a separate case last week by a judge in Massachusetts. In this case, the judge agreed to the trade unions representing federal workers who did not have a position to appeal the Trump administration’s actions in the Federal Court.