Judge blocks Trump admin from Education Dept. mass firings
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President Donald Trump participates in a session of the G7 Summit, Monday, June 16, 2025, in Kananaskis, Canada (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein).

A federal judge on Thursday expanded the scope of an injunction issued against one of President Donald Trump”s executive orders targeting a Big Law firm – granting a request from the law firm itself.

The ruling puts the kibosh on a squabble between the law firm and the government over the reach of the court’s earlier nullification.

On March 27, the 45th and 47th president signed an Executive Order entitled “Addressing Risks from WilmerHale” which — like many similar such orders — accused the Los Angeles-based law firm of Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP, popularly stylized as WilmerHale, of “conduct detrimental to critical American interests” and which aimed to cut its employees out of the federal government.

On March 26, WilmerHale filed a 64-page complaint. The government, in turn, moved to dismiss the lawsuit entirely, turning the dispute into a battle over motions for summary judgment.

On May 27, Senior U.S. District Judge Richard J. Leon, a George W. Bush appointee, issued an emphatic ruling for the plaintiffs in the form of a 73-page memorandum opinion featuring no fewer than 27 exclamation points — used to express disdain for what the court views as the severity of the constitutional violations in Trump’s order. In volubly chiding language, the judge termed the attack on WilmerHale “null and void” for violating the U.S. Constitution.

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Earlier this month, in a six-page motion to amend the judgment, the law firm said its lawsuit was fashioned in such a way so as to explicitly encompass the entire federal government.

The court, however, initially cabined the reach of its injunction.

“WilmerHale named only 51 federal agencies and officers in its Complaint, and the Court thus issued injunctive relief only as to those agencies and officers,” Leon explained in a 6-page memorandum order issued this week.

Now, the court has clarified its order to apply to the entirety of the federal government, writ large and full stop.

“The Court finds that amending its Order is necessary to prevent manifest injustice,” the order goes on. “WilmerHale is concerned that even though the Court declared the WilmerHale Order unconstitutional, it ‘will nevertheless be enforced against it by agencies and officers who may not be aware (or could potentially claim unawareness) of either this Court’s declaratory judgment or their obligation to comply with that declaration.’The Court struck down the WilmerHale Order in its entirety and declared it null and void.”

In their motion to clarify filed June 10, the law firm explained that the Trump administration refused to directly notify several agencies about the nullification order – despite repeat emails from WilmerHale’s counsel.

In other words, the law firm sued several dozen named agencies — and the United States broadly — in the hope that it would be clear and understood they were suing the entirety of the federal government covered by Trump’s order. But after the dust settled, the Trump administration claimed the lawsuit — and concomitant injunction — only covered the enumerated agencies listed at the outset.

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