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Obama-Appointed Judge Votes in Trump’s Favor

A judge appointed by former President Barack Obama has ruled that President Donald Trump can fire a special counsel while an appeals court considers the case.

Hampton Dellinger, who was Trump’s special counsel, sued to overturn the firing in federal court. The legal battle over Dellinger’s fate is central to Trump’s strategy of eliminating government employees he deems unnecessary.

Former President Joe Biden made Dellinger a special counsel whose job it was to handle cases involving federal government whistleblowers. The purpose of the post was to enable federal workers to report scams and wrongdoing without fear of repercussions.

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A one-sentence email fired Dellinger when Trump got back to the White House in January. The case against Dellinger has been going on in federal court ever since.

U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson, who was appointed by Obama, had temporarily put Dellinger back on the job while he worked on his case.

The three-person Washington, D.C. Court of Appeals overturned Berman Jackson unanimously on March 5. The ruling meant that Trump could fire Dellinger while the appeals court looked into the legal issues in the case.

Former President George H.W. Bush chose Karen Henderson as a judge for the D.C. appeals court. Obama chose Patricia Millett, and Trump chose Justin Walker during his first term.

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Before Obama put her forward for the federal court, Millett argued 32 cases before the U.S. Supreme Court, so she is an experienced constitutional lawyer.

The appeals court ruled “that the district court’s March 1, 2025, order be stayed pending further order of the court” and that “this order gives effect to the removal of appellee from his position as Special Counsel of the U.S. Office of Special Counsel. Appellants [The Trump administration] have satisfied the stringent requirements for a stay pending appeal.”

In a footnote to her written order, Judge Amy Berman Jackson expressed her disapproval of the Trump administration. She also criticized the White House lawyers for telling her in court that bringing Dellinger back would cause too much chaos in the special counsel’s office.

“Defendants imply that it would be too disruptive to the business of the agency to have Special Counsel Dellinger resume his work. But any disruption to the work of the agency was occasioned by the White House. It’s as if the bull in the china shop looked back over his shoulder and said, ‘What a mess!’” the judge said.

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Acting Solicitor General Sarah M. Harris, in a February 16 Supreme Court appeal of Berman Jackson’s ruling, stated, “As this Court observed just last Term, ‘Congress cannot act on, and courts cannot examine, the President’s actions on subjects within his conclusive and preclusive constitutional authority’ —including ‘the President’s unrestricted power of removal concerning ‘executive officers of the United States whom [the President] has appointed.’”

The case has been elevated in the order of business by an appeals court in Washington, D.C.

Before April 11, it wants a reply brief from the Trump administration by March 21, then a brief from Dellinger’s lawyers by April 4, and finally a brief from the Trump administration by April 11. It hasn’t set a date for oral arguments yet.

“The Clerk is directed to calendar this case for oral argument this term on the first appropriate date following the completion of briefing. The parties will be informed later of the date of oral argument,” the court stated in its March 5 order.

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Republican lawmakers and conservatives in the media have praised the ruling, even though it may be subject to change down the road. Nonetheless, the ruling is good for conservatives and makes liberals unhappy as they have responded on social media with glee.

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