A new legal maneuver could test the independence of the board that hears appeals of personnel actions by the government.
This is a sponsored column by attorneys John Berry and Kimberly Berry of Berry & Berry, PLLC, an employment and labor law ...
A recent legal opinion called into question the "channeling" doctrine that's kept federal courts from hearing many disputes involving federal employment.
Legal challenges over President Donald Trump's firing of various Democratic independent agency officials, including on the Federal Trade Commission, have begun piling up at the U.S. Supreme Court.
President Trump wants to be able to fire far more executive branch employees at will — upending checks on presidential power ...
D.C. Circuit Judge Robert Wilkins seemed skeptical of the government’s argument that employees contesting their terminations ...
President Trump’s firings at the Federal Reserve and other agencies with traditional independence from the political forces ...
Former FBI Director James Comey’s daughter, who has prosecuted Epstein and other high-profile figures, says she was given no ...
The Supreme Court agreed Monday to formally consider overruling its 90-year-old precedent that enables Congress to provide ...
The Supreme Court said Monday it will consider expanding President Donald Trump's power to shape independent agencies by ...
The hearing could lead to the justices overruling a landmark 90-year-old precedent upholding job protections put in place by ...