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Judges rule against Trump in several cases including trans military ban | Trump administration

The Trump administration suffered a legal set-off Wednesday night when transgender people serving in the military were prevented from being forced into a ban and courts blocked the government from refusing to appeal the White House that allowed the government to fire thousands of federal workers.

A Washington, D.C. judge has rejected the government's attempt to lift a court order that would prevent the military ban on transgender people, which was due to take effect Friday.

US District Judge Ana Reyes also criticized the Trump administration's proposed implementation plan. Supporters reportednote that all 1.3 million service members must self-report each year whether they have experienced gender discomfort. Reyes said the proposal was equivalent to “running through private medical records” because it had in place a court order.

Meanwhile, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals declined to suspend the previous ruling of a judge who called for the Trump administration to revive more than 17,000 probation employees at six agencies that lost their jobs as part of a purge in the federal workforce.

The decision applies to workers from the Department of Defense, the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Energy, the Department of Interior and Treasury.

Mass shootings of probation workers – usually employees who have been in their current roles for less than a year, sometimes less than two years – were the first step Broader efforts by Trump And his senior adviser, tech monarch Elon Musk, will significantly reduce federal workers and cut government spending.

The judge found that on March 13, the Human Resources Administration, which is closely linked to the White House, improperly ordered six agencies to fire workers despite their lack of power to do so. The Trump administration responded, saying it was working to revive its employees, but also appealed to the ruling.

In a series of rulings, the federal court of appeals also said it would not lift an order banning the Trump administration from deporting immigrants to El Salvador under 18th-century wartime laws.

It upheld the March 15th order that upheld the March 15th order of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

The government deported hundreds of people under the president's declaration and called out the Tren de Aragua gang, born in Venezuela, an invasion force. The Justice Department appealed after Boasberg ordered that more deportations be stopped and the plane road of Venezuela migrants be returned to the United States. The plane never returned.

On Wednesday, Trump's target, Boasberg was assigned to a lawsuit alleging that Trump officials violated federal record-keeping laws using signal group chats to discuss looming military actions against Yemen's Houtis.

Trump sought Boasburg's each after the verdict on El Salvador's deportation.

The defeat came when the government appeared to be violating a federal court order on Wednesday. It was transferred to the South Louisiana Immigration Processing Center when it moved on Tuesday to Rumeysa Ozturk, a doctoral student in Boston who was detained by federal immigration agents in response to Palestinian activism.

The transfer of Ozturk, a doctoral student at Tufts University, appears to be in violation of a court order issued Tuesday.

Reuters and the Associated Press contributed to the report

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