If a house divided against itself cannot stand, then why would federal courts allow the United States to sue itself? It’s hard to imagine a scenario where a house could, or would, be more divided. Yet ...
Nineteen Democratic-led states and the District of Columbia are arguing in court that the Trump administration’s mass firing ...
The retaliatory aim of the Order is intentionally obvious to the general public and the press because the very goal is to ...
A coalition of 21 attorneys general, including Maryland’s top prosecutor, is suing the Trump administration over sweeping ...
Maryland and D.C.’s Attorney General Anthony Brown and Brian Schwalb announced Thursday that they, along with 18 other states ...
A law firm targeted by President Donald Trump over its legal services during the 2016 presidential campaign sued the federal government Tuesday over an executive order that seeks ...
Unions for federal workers have filed a lawsuit to block the mass firings of probationary federal employees by President Donald Trump’s administration, alleging that officials are exploiting and ...
offering them to leave their government jobs and get paid through September, or risk being laid off. DC-based federal Judge Randolph Moss denied a request for a temporary restraining order (TRO ...
Michigan's AG and other attorneys general claim the firings are part of the administration’s attempt to decimate the entire federal government ... Minnesota, DC, Arizona, California, Colorado ...
The claims filed Tuesday are the first step in a process outlined by the Federal Tort Claims Act, which allows people to sue the federal government ... What's the latest on DC plane crash ...