Former USAID official, three contractors plead guilty in $550M bribery scheme
June 15, 2025
Could DC’s deal for a new Commanders stadium be in jeopardy?
June 15, 2025The Trump administration has sought special dispensation to imminently cut staff at State, but employees won a—potentially short-lived—reprieve.
The State Department cannot proceed with its reorganization, which was set to include thousands of layoffs, after a federal judge on Friday updated a previous ruling blocking federal workforce reductions to include the agency’s plans.
State was already subject to an injunction that blocked most major federal agencies from issuing reductions in force, but the Trump administration had argued the department was a “special case” that merited different treatment. California-based District Judge Susan Illston rejected that argument, however, and on Friday issued a new order demanding State not proceed with planned layoffs.
The administration had argued State’s reorganization was conducted separately from President Trump’s mandate that all agencies slash their workforces and instead occurred only at the instruction of Secretary Marco Rubio. Because Illston’s order applied only to Trump’s executive order and subsequent guidance from the Office of Management and Budget and the Office of Personnel Management, Justice Department lawyers said, State’s plans were not subject to the injunction.
Those attorneys said State could begin issuing layoffs as soon as Friday, but employees were subsequently told that would not occur. Still, absent the court’s intervention, the RIF notices were expected to hit inboxes in the coming days or weeks. All told, State is looking to shed its workforce by 3,400 employees.


