Trump Got the Green Light to Fire Federal Workers. Now, They Wait.
Trump Got the Green Light to Fire Federal Workers. Now, They Wait.

Trump Got the Green Light to Fire Federal Workers. Now, They Wait.

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Diverging Reports Breakdown

In the news today: Public servants losing confidence, major agribusiness merger

Almost two-thirds of respondents in the new survey said senior managers in their department or agency model ethical behaviour. Canada urged to deter exits from landmine treaty as six countries on Europe’s eastern flank move toward using the explosive weapons. Quebec language watchdog gives all-clear on ‘go’ to cheer on sports teams. Bunge announces successful merger with Viterra Limited, forming what they anticipate will be a leading global agribusiness company specializing in food, feed, and fuel. The US$8.2-billion deal was finalized nearly six months after the Canadian government approved the merger, having included specific terms and conditions to address competition concerns. The Canadian Press published the first Canadian Press report on July 3, 2025, based on a report by The Canadian. Press based on information from the Canadian. Public Interest Research Group (CPI) and the Canadian Council for the Advancement of Science and theoretical Economics (CCSE). The report was published by the CPI and the CCSE on July 4, 2025.

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Almost two-thirds of respondents in the new survey said senior managers in their department or agency model ethical behaviour.

Almost half said they make effective and timely decisions, and that essential information flows effectively from senior management to staff.

Supply management bill may not save it from Trump

A new law meant to protect supply management might not be enough to shield the system in trade talks with a Trump administration bent on eliminating it, trade experts say.

“It’s certainly more difficult to strike a deal with the United States now with the passage of this bill that basically forces Canada to negotiate with one hand tied behind its back,” said William Pellerin, a trade lawyer and partner at the firm McMillan LLP.

“Now that we’ve removed the digital service tax, dairy and supply management is probably the number 1 trade irritant that we have with the United States. That remains very much unresolved.”

When Trump briefly paused trade talks with Canada on June 27 over the digital services tax — shortly before Ottawa capitulated by dropping the tax — he zeroed in on Canada’s system of supply management.

Canada urged to deter exits from landmine treaty

Canadian advocates are urging Ottawa to protect the 1997 treaty Canada brokered to stop the use of landmines, as six countries on Europe’s eastern flank move toward using the explosive weapons.

“I’m deeply concerned about this,” said Sen. Marilou McPhedran. “Thousands and thousands of lives have been saved because of this treaty.”

Global Affairs Canada says it’s in talks with countries moving away from the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention, often referred to as the Ottawa Treaty, which since 1999 has banned the use, production, stockpiling and transfer of anti-personnel landmines.

Since then, Canada has spent millions of dollars to help rid the world of landmines that overwhelmingly injure and maim civilians and children, including in Ukraine.

Viterra, Bunge $8.2B merger officially completed

Bunge announced its successful merger with Viterra Limited, forming what they anticipate will be a leading global agribusiness company specializing in food, feed, and fuel.

This US$8.2-billion deal was finalized nearly six months after the Canadian government approved the merger, having included specific terms and conditions to address competition concerns.

According to a media release, Bunge’s CEO, Greg Heckman, stated that this union creates a more robust organization with enhanced capabilities and expertise.

Viterra, a grain-handling business formerly known as the Saskatchewan Wheat Pool, operates over 80 facilities across Canada.

Quebec language office gives all-clear on ‘go’

Quebec’s language watchdog has changed its tune on whether it’s acceptable to use the word “go” to cheer on sports teams.

In a new guideline posted in its online dictionary, the Office québécois de la langue française says that while “allez” is the preferred term, it’s now “partially legitimized” to use the English word to show encouragement.

The flip-flop comes after the office took a hard line with Montreal’s transit agency, pressing it for months in 2024 to scrub the word “go” from the electronic signs on more than 1,000 city buses.

The watchdog confirmed it had changed its position after The Canadian Press obtained a series of emails through access to information legislation, revealing it gave the transit agency a green light to use “go” in June.

Exotic pet warning after second B.C. boa search

Inspector Drew Milne of the British Columbia Conservation Officer Service likened it to finding a needle in a haystack — the haystack being a 137-hectare park on Vancouver Island, and the needle being a 1.5-metre-long boa constrictor.

But searchers for the snake had a reliable witness, and cool conditions last week in the area suggested it was unlikely the cold-blooded reptile could have slithered far from where it was seen in Miracle Beach Provincial Park, about 250 kilometres northwest of Victoria.

“We narrowed down a location where we felt it probably would have been based upon our understanding of the snake, its behaviour, and the location,” said Milne, describing how the snake was found last Thursday.

“We found it within seconds. I had just grabbed that snake and was pulling it out of the bush.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 3, 2025

The Canadian Press

Source: Nanaimonewsnow.com | View original article

Obscure provision in House bill threatens enforcement of court rulings on Trump

A provision in the House-passed package of Trump’s priorities would require litigants to post a bond before a judge could enforce an order blocking a Trump policy. The bond could match the amount at stake in the lawsuit, which in one case was trillions in federal grants. At stake is whether judges can enforce their orders blocking Trump policies that are ruled unlawful, as they already have 180 times. The muscle behind court orders is that judges could find government officials in contempt if they disobey, threatening fines, sanctions or even jail. But the obscure House provision, which even a Republican supporter of the legislation disavowed, would prevent judges from enforcing their orders unless litigant post bond. The legislative provision echoes a Trump memo signed March 11 that called for the Justice Department to request bonds in all lawsuits to protect against “potential costs and damages from a wrongly issued injunction,” the memo said. It would apply to court orders before, on, or after the legislation is enacted, meaning it wouldapply to all the orders already issued.

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A provision in the House-passed package of Trump’s priorities would require litigants to post a bond before a judge could enforce an order blocking a Trump policy.

Judges have blocked Trump policies in 180 cases, which would all have to be reviewed for bonds if the Senate approves the House provision and Trump signs it into law.

Judges have discretion to set bonds in civil cases, but legal experts say they have waived bonds in lawsuits against the government because the disputes are typically over policy rather than money.

WASHINGTON – A provision in the House-passed package of President Donald Trump’s priorities would erect what one judge called a trillion-dollar barrier to challenging his policies in federal court.

At stake is whether judges can enforce their orders blocking Trump policies that are ruled unlawful, as they already have 180 times. The muscle behind court orders is that judges could find government officials in contempt if they disobey, threatening fines, sanctions or even jail.

But the obscure House provision, which even a Republican supporter of the legislation disavowed, would prevent judges from enforcing their orders unless litigants post a bond. The bond could match the amount at stake in the lawsuit, which in one case was trillions in federal grants.

Without the threat of contempt, legal experts say the Trump administration could ignore court orders with impunity.

“What this provision would do, is say that actually, no court of the United States could enforce an injunction or restraining order using their contempt authority,” Eric Kashdan, senior legal counsel for federal advocacy at the nonprofit Campaign Legal Center, told USA TODAY.

Judges, litigants and waiving bonds

The legislation deals with one of the rules governing federal civil lawsuits – known as 65(c). It calls for litigants to post a bond if they win a court order such as an injunction or a temporary restraining order to block something from happening, in case the defendant ultimately wins the case.

Judges have discretion about how much to set the bond. But the goal is to have the bond comparable to how much the defendant might lose while the case is litigated, such as a lost sale or blocked merger.

For decades judges have waived bonds in cases against the government because the lawsuits aren’t typically over money – they are about a disputed policy or the Constitution.

In February, U.S. District Judge Loren AliKhan refused a request from Trump’s White House Office of Management Budget to require a bond from the National Council of Nonprofits when she blocked the government from freezing all federal grants.

“The court declines,” Alikhan wrote.

She noted the government was “alleged to have unlawfully withheld trillions of dollars of previously committed funds to countless recipients.” But she said OMB would suffer no monetary injury from her injunction.

Why is Trump pushing for this?

The legislative provision in the budget reconciliation bill prohibits federal courts from enforcing contempt citations unless a bond was posted when an injunction or temporary restraining order was issued.

It applies to court orders before, on, or after the legislation is enacted, meaning it would apply to all the orders already issued.

Judges would have to weigh proposals to determine what bonds should be required in each case, according to legal experts. With discretion, a judge could impose a nominal $1 bond but the process would still take time, experts said.

“All temporary restraining orders, preliminary injunctions, and permanent injunctions where no bond had been posted no longer would be enforceable by contempt,” Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of law school at the University of California, Berkeley, told USA TODAY.

The legislative provision echoes a Trump memo signed March 11 that called for the Justice Department to request bonds in all lawsuits to protect against “potential costs and damages from a wrongly issued injunction.”

“Federal courts should hold litigants accountable for their misrepresentations and ill-granted injunctions,” the memo said.

Which Trump policies have been blocked in federal courts?

Trump signed 157 executive orders by May 23 – an unprecedented number four months into a presidential term – to put sweeping policies in place quickly, without waiting for legislation through Congress.

The orders led to 250 lawsuits challenging Trump’s dismantling of federal agencies and firing federal workers, swiftly deporting immigrants, ending diversity initiatives and imposing tariffs. The rulings in deportation cases include:

U.S. District Judge James Boasberg in Washington, D.C., found probable cause April 16 the government acted with criminal contempt for his order blocking the deportation of Venezuelans who were accused of being gang members before they had a chance to fight the designation in court. The government appealed his ruling.

U.S. District Paula Xinis in Maryland has held repeated hearings asking for updates from the government on the deportation of a Salvadoran immigrant who was mistakenly deported despite an immigration court order preventing his removal. Government officials have argued they no longer have custody of the migrant to return him because he is in a Salvadoran prison.

U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy in Massachusetts ruled May 21 the government violated his order temporarily halting deportations to countries other than where migrants were from, after six migrants were flown to South Sudan. The government asked the Supreme Court on May 27 to lift Murphy’s block.

Trump and his allies have argued that judges are infringing on his authority to protect national security and negotiate foreign affairs with other countries.

“We hope that the Supreme Court will weigh in and rein them in,” White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said May 29 of “rogue judges.” Trump directed the administration to comply with court orders, Leavitt said, “but we’re going to fight them in court and we’re going to win on the merits of these cases because we know we are acting within the president’s legal and executive authority.”

But legal experts said requiring the deported immigrants to post a bond would likely prohibit them from having cases heard in federal courts. If courts are no longer able to enforce their orders under the legislation, experts said the government might just ignore the orders.

“If they can simply ignore the order, they don’t have to appeal it. They can simply not do it,” said Mark Foley, a 43-year lawyer in Milwaukee. “It’s a heads they win and tails I lose.”

Fight over injunctions ‘a huge separation of powers issue’: Legal experts

The dispute over enforcing court orders adds Congress’ legislative branch to the raging debate the separation of powers between Trump’s executive branch carrying out laws and judges interpreting some of his actions as unlawful.

Trump has blasted judges who ruled against him but said he will obey court orders and appeal the ones he doesn’t like. As Trump appeals, the Supreme Court faces an unprecedented 14 emergency requests from the administration to green-light his policies, including four that are still pending.

In the legislative debate, legal experts say Trump’s fellow Republicans leading Congress will decide whether to hinder courts at the president’s request from enforcing orders against the executive branch.

“This is Congress saying, ‘No, we don’t think you can enforce these orders’ and they’re doing that at the strong demands of the executive branch,” Kashdan said. “It’s a huge separation of powers issue for what underlies our democracy, and all the checks and balances we’re supposed to have.”

‘I do not agree’: GOP lawmaker who supported legislation

The provision was obscure enough in the 1,100-page legislation that some who supported the bill were unaware of it.

Rep. Mike Flood, R-Nebraska, told a raucous town hall May 27 that he was unaware of the provision and didn’t support it. He added that he would urge the Senate to drop it.

“I do not agree with that section that was added to that bill,” Flood said. “I do believe that the federal district courts when issuing an injunction, it should have legal effect. This provision was unknown to me when I voted for the bill.”

Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, told a town hall May 30 in Parkersburg that the bond provision “will not be” in the Senate version of the bill because she expects the parliamentarian to rule that it doesn’t have a financial impact on the budget, which is required for this type of legislation.”I don’t see any argument that could ever be made that this affects mandatory spending or revenues,” Ernst said. “It will not be in the Senate bill.”

Senators will begin next week reviewing the legislation with a goal of sending any changes back to the House and to Trump before July 4.

Source: Usatoday.com | View original article

Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/08/us/politics/trump-federal-workers-firings.html

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