Biden appointee Hampton Dellinger asks justices to find his termination without cause is illegal.
The head of a whistleblower-protection agency whom the Trump administration wants to fire urged the U.S. Supreme Court on Feb. 18 to leave in place a lower court order blocking the firing.
The closely watched emergency government application, Bessent v. Dellinger, is the first appeal by the second Trump administration to the nationâs highest court. Applicant Scott Bessent is participating in the litigation in his official capacity as U.S. Treasury secretary.
The respondent, Hampton Dellinger, said an emailed notice he received on Feb. 7 informed him he was being fired and did not explain why. New administrations routinely fire government officials without providing a reason. President Donald Trump was inaugurated on Jan. 20.
Dellinger argues that according to the law, he may only be terminated for certain reasons during his appointment.
The government failed to justify âthe Presidentâs hasty, unexplained action, or … the immediate ejection of the Senate-confirmed Special Counsel while the legal issue is subject to calm and thorough deliberation,â she wrote.
The D.C. Circuitâs majority opinion states that even though a temporary restraining order âordinarily is not an appealable order,â the government requested a hearing on it because it said the order âworks an extraordinary harm.â
âThe relief requested by the government is a sharp departure from established procedures that balance and protect the interests of litigants, and ensure the orderly consideration of cases before the district court and this court,â the opinion reads.
Circuit Judge Gregory Katsas dissented. He wrote that the president âis immune from injunctions directing the performance of his official duties, and Article II of the Constitution grants him the power to remove agency heads.â
The government said it has a âvery highâ likelihood of succeeding on the merits. The Constitution âempowers the President to remove, at will, the single head of an agency, such as the Special Counsel,â the filing reads.
Federal district courts do not have the authority âto reinstate principal officers,â according to the application.
The lower court has âerred in ways that threaten the separation of powersâ of the U.S. government, the document said. The separation of powers is a constitutional doctrine that divides the government into three branches to prevent any single branch from accumulating too much power.
Dellinger argues in the document that âthe government has failed to carry its heavy burden of demonstrating that this short-lived [temporary restraining order] is immediately appealable.â
He says the circuit courtâs ruling was correct because with âlimited exceptions, appellate courts may review only final judgments of district courts.â
The governmentâs argument that the temporary restraining order should be deemed appealable because it allegedly interferes with the presidentâs constitutional authority is not a principle the Supreme Court recognizes, the brief says.
The Supreme Court should reject the governmentâs application because accepting it âwould open the floodgates to many more fire-drill [temporary restraining order] appeals and which is particularly unjustified in the context of this litigation.â
The Epoch Times reached out for comment to Dellingerâs attorney, Joshua Matz at Hecker Fink in Washington, and the DOJ, which represents Bessent. No replies were received by publication time.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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