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Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, left, and Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump attend a campaign event at the Butler Farm Show, Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, in Butler, Pa. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon).

The Trump administration secured a key victory in federal court this week as a judge allowed Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) to continue firing workers and closing down field offices at the Social Security Administration (SSA).

In a six-page memorandum opinion and order issued Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Amit P. Mehta, who was appointed by Barack Obama, denied a motion for a preliminary injunction brought by a coalition of nonprofits, along with a handful of individual Social Security beneficiaries, seeking to stop the government downsizing operations.

On April 2, the plaintiffs in the case sued DOGE, Musk, and Social Security Acting Commissioner Leland Dudek alleging various statutory and constitutional violations — including claims under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), the long-standing federal law that governs the actions of administrative agencies.

“Defendants are now executing a campaign of systemic dismantling: reducing offices, slashing the workforce by 7,000 employees, imposing a hiring freeze while drastically reducing overtime, consolidating regional offices from ten to four, and placing crushing new burdens on the agency’s local offices,” the 51-page lawsuit reads.

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In a three-page motion for a preliminary injunction filed along with the original petition, the plaintiffs argued they were likely to prove the proposed workforce reductions, office closures and “implementation of new policies requiring in-person services in local field offices, disproportionately impact people with disabilities.”

In the Tuesday order, however, the judge said none of the plaintiffs have “shown that they are at actual and imminent risk of suffering great harm” from any of the proposed actions.

“The court shares Plaintiffs’ concerns about the effects of the challenged actions on the SSA’s capacity to deliver services, but the law requires more than what they have offered to award the extraordinary intervention of injunctive relief,” Mehta writes.

In fact, the judge said, the plaintiffs had not even alleged conduct that could be traced to the specific DOGE proposals at issue.

Instead, the individual plaintiffs “largely” complained about “matters that predate the administrative actions at issue,” Mehta found.

The opinion highlights a few such complaints, such as termination of benefits in 2024, denial of benefits in 2024, a “burdensome” appointment in 2024, and generally long wait times to resolve issues. In other words, the judge concluded, the individual plaintiffs cited problems with Social Security either too general and ongoing to have anything to do with DOGE’s cuts — or problems that occurred even before DOGE’s formation.

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