Trump DOJ asks SCOTUS to let him fire Biden ethics enforcer
Hampton Dellinger (Office of Special Counsel).

Left: President-elect Donald Trump on “Meet the Press” Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024 (NBC News/YouTube). Right: Hampton Dellinger (Office of Special Counsel).

The Trump administration has urgently asked the U.S. Supreme Court to quickly review a lower court’s decision allowing Joe Biden’s ethics enforcer, Hampton Dellinger, to maintain his position at the Office of Special Counsel. This comes after a federal judge in Washington, D.C., granted Dellinger an extension on Wednesday.

The Justice Department under Trump alleges that Dellinger is abusing executive power by preventing the president from dismissing federal employees deemed unsuitable for government service. A letter from the DOJ to the Supreme Court emphasizes the urgency of the matter. The DOJ is specifically requesting the Supreme Court to at least continue holding an application filed by its lawyers earlier in the month regarding the Dellinger case. Previous attempts to remove Dellinger were rejected by both a federal appeals court and the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.

In response, Dellinger and his legal team issued a letter of their own on Thursday, refuting the claims made by Trump’s legal team. They assert that the Trump administration is misinterpreting the events surrounding the attempted firings.

“The government misdescribes what occurred,” wrote Dellinger attorney Joshua Matz to the Supreme Court.

“It was the MSPB, not the Special Counsel, that ‘halt[ed]’ certain personnel actions and it is the MSPB (not the Special Counsel) that will render any further decisions and issue any binding orders within the Executive Branch’s internal administrative process concerning the propriety of those personnel actions,” Matz said. “As the Special Counsel is fully prepared to explain when the government properly raises this issue within the litigation, there is no merit to the government’s assertion that this administrative action supports its position. To the contrary, a more accurate understanding of that process confirms the Special Counsel’s position concerning his for-cause removal protection.”

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