Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
A Federal Court of Appeals cleared the way for President Donald Trump to dismiss Hampton Dellinger, head of the Special Advice Office.
Dellinger, appointed for the role of former President Joe Biden, sued the Trump administration in Washington, DC, Federal Court after its dismissal of February 7.
DC district judge, Amy Berman Jackson, had argued in a presentation last month that Dellinger’s dismissal was “illegal.”
However, the United States Court of Appeals for the Columbia district was put on the side of the Trump administration in a ruling on Wednesday. Dellinger is likely to appeal the case to Supreme Court.
President Donald Trump and Hampton Dellinger. Trump is trying to fire Dellinger, head of the Special Advisor Office. (AP / Reuters)
Federal Judge suggests that he will continue blocking Trump from the Agency for the Demon Protection
Jackson said that the court “considers that the elimination of restrictions on the elimination of the plaintiff would be fatal for the definition and essential characteristic of the Special Advisor Office as conceived by Congress and signed by the President: its independence. The Court concludes that they must endure.”
Special Advisor of the United States Special Council Office Hampton Dellinger poses for a portrait in an image of brochures without date. (Special Law Office/Brochure of the United States through Reuters)
Dellinger has maintained the argument that, by law, he can only be fired from his position due to work performance problems, which were not cited in an email that rules out from his publication.
Journalists work outside the United States Supreme Court building in Washington, DC (Anna MoneyMaker/Getty images)
Click here to get the Fox News application
In early February, Judges of the Liberal Supreme Court Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson voted to directly deny the request of the administration to approve dismissal.
The conservative judges Neil Gorsuch and Samuel Alito disagreed, saying that the lower court exceeded. They also threw doubts about whether the courts have the authority to restore to assign someone that the president has fired. Although they acknowledged that some officials appointed by the President have played his removal, Gorsuch wrote in his opinion that “those officials have generally sought remedies such as the recoil, not a relief by court order such as restoration.”