The Trump administration has appealed to the Supreme Court, hoping to get permission to dismiss the head of the federal agency that focuses on protecting whistleblowers.
The necessary appeal obtained by the Associated Press on Sunday, could probably be the start of a steady stream of court applications by lawyers from President Donald Trump and his administration were aimed at reversing lower judicial statements that have his priorities for his second term of office delayed.
The profession tries to prevent Hampton Dellinger from resuming its role as head of the Office of Special Counsel.
A judge of the lower court previously repaired temporary Delinger in his position, to which he was appointed by former President Joe Biden. Now the Ministry of Justice calls on High Court to lift the judge’s order.

United States Supreme Court (Front Row LR) Associate Justice Sotomayor, Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, Chief Justice of the United States John Roberts, Associate Justice Samuel Alito, and Associed Justicee Jukan, Assocate Justiceate Jukan, (Back Rowate, Assocate, Assocate, Assocate, Custiateate Justiceate, Consocatee Justiatee Justiateice, Cubiorate Jukan, Assocate Justice Neil Gorsuch, associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh and associated Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson. (Alex Wong/Getty images)
Dellinger has argued that according to the law he can only be dismissed from his position for work performance problems, which were not cited in an e -mail that releases him from his position.
The petition of the Trump government came hours after a court of appeal refused to increase the order on procedural grounds, which was submitted last Wednesday and is expected to expire on 26 February.
The housing is not expected to be placed on the docket The Supreme Court Returns after the presidents’s holiday weekend. Once submitted, the first judges will be Tuesday.
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The Trump government submitted an appeal to the Supreme Court in the hope of getting permission to dismiss the head of the office of special counsel. (Donald Trump 2024 -Campagne)
Last Monday, Dellinger suggested the Trump government in the Federal Hof of DC after his resignation on 7 February.
The Trump government has received a wave of court cases since the inauguration day, and legal experts say that many of them will probably end up in the hands of the Supreme Court.
“President Trump is certainly aggressive in terms of bending executive power and does not surprise that these will be challenged,” said John Malcolm, vice president of the Institute for Constitutional Government at the Heritage Foundation, to Fox News Digital last week.
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President Donald Trump’s second term began with a flurry of executive orders and guidelines that have since been aimed at legal challenges, some of which will probably end in the hands of the Supreme Court. (AP photo)
Trump started his second term with a flurry of executive orders and guidelines that have since been the target of a flood of a stream of Legal challenges.
Since the first day of Trump in the Oval Office, more than 40 lawsuits have been filed on the actions of the administration, including the order of the president’s birthright, immigration policy, federal financing, federal buyouts of employees, Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency ( Doge), and legal steps against FBI and DOJ employees.
In one of the most recent developments, a federal judge of Rhode Island ordered the Trump administration To make federal funds, and claimed that the administration did not consider an earlier order to do this. Shortly thereafter, the Trump government appealed against the order to the first circuit, which was eventually denied.
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Many of these lawsuits have been brought into historic left -wing federal court jurisdictions, including the federal court of DC. Various challenges have already been appealed to the Court of Appeal, including the ninth and first circuits, which in particular transfer more progressive judgments. The ninth circuit in particular has a higher turning speed than other circuit courts.
Haley Chi-Sing from Fox News Digital and the Associated Press have contributed to this report.