Categories: Politics

Federal judge blocks Trump admin from firing 2 Dem members of privacy oversight board

A federal judge blocked President Donald Trump’s administration from firing two Democratic members of the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board on Wednesday.

Trump fired all three Democratic members of the five-person board in February, resulting in two of them filing a lawsuit. U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton found that allowing unilateral firings would prevent the board from carrying out its purpose.

Walton wrote that allowing at-will removals would make the board “beholden to the very authority it is supposed to oversee on behalf of Congress and the American people.”

The oversight board was initially created by Congress to ensure that federal counterterrorism policies were in line with privacy and civil liberties law.

‘ACTIVIST’ JUDGES KEEP TRYING TO CURB TRUMP’S AGENDA – HERE’S HOW HE COULD PUSH BACK

President Donald Trump attempted to fire all three Democratic members of the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

“To hold otherwise would be to bless the President’s obvious attempt to exercise power beyond that granted to him by the Constitution and shield the Executive Branch’s counterterrorism actions from independent oversight, public scrutiny, and bipartisan congressional insight regarding those actions,” Walton wrote.

Trump’s firings left just one Republican on the board. The third Democratic member had just two days left in her term when she was removed, and she did not sue the administration.

TRUMP ADMINISTRATION GUTS INSTITUTE OF PEACE OF ‘ROGUE BUREAUCRATS’ AFTER DOGE STANDOFF IN GOVERNMENT OFFICE

Video

The two plaintiffs, Travis LeBlanc and Edward Felten, argued in their lawsuit that members of the board cannot be fired without cause. Meanwhile, lawyers for Trump’s administration argued that members of other congressionally created boards do have explicit job protections, and it would therefore be wrong for Walton to create such protections where they are absent.

“The Constitution gives President Trump the power to remove personnel who exercise his executive authority,” White House spokesman Harrison Fields told the Associated Press. “The Trump Administration looks forward to ultimate victory on the issue.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The plaintiffs also argued that their firings left just one member on the board, a Republican, and that falls short of the quorum required for the board to function.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Share

Recent Posts

149 million passwords exposed in massive credential leak

It has been a rough start to the year for password security. A massive database…

4 hours ago

Your phone shares data at night: Here’s how to stop it

If your smartphone stays on your bedside table overnight, it stays busy long after you…

6 hours ago

Artificial Intelligence helps fuel new energy sources

Artificial Intelligence and data centers have been blamed for rising electricity costs across the U.S.…

20 hours ago

Super Bowl scams surge in February and target your data

The Super Bowl is not only the biggest sporting event of the year, but it…

1 day ago

TikTok after the US sale: What changed and how to use it safely

Since news broke in late January that TikTok's U.S. operations would move under American-led ownership,…

1 day ago

AI wearable helps stroke survivors speak again

Losing the ability to speak clearly after a stroke can feel devastating. For many survivors,…

2 days ago