Supreme Court allows mass layoffs at Education Department
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The Trump administration will reduce planned federal worker layoffs, a personnel official said on Monday, after tens of thousands of employees accepted buyouts or retired early to avoid dismissal.
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ABP News on MSNAfter Mass Layoffs, Microsoft’s Botched AI Job Ad Adds Insult To Injury: Here's What Went DownMicrosoft has landed in hot water, this time over a hiring post for Xbox that featured a flawed AI-generated image. The post, shared by a senior Xbox developer, aimed to advertise graphic design roles but quickly turned into a viral moment for all the wrong reasons.
It's "impossible for something like this not to ripple through the studio and affect all of us in some way or another."
Workers in Oregon’s semiconductor industry give the state a financial boost. Without them, officials say, the effects will trickle down.
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Amazon S3 on MSNTrump’s $2 BILLION Attack on Harvard: Mass Layoffs Kick In as Harvard Faces Research Fund FreezeHarvard University faces a billion-dollar hit as the Trump administration freezes $2.6 billion in research funds, hikes taxes on its endowment, and pushes a 15% cap on international student enrollment.
President Donald Trump's administration has told a federal judge that it cannot be ordered to disclose federal agencies' reorganization and mass layoff plans as part of a lawsuit seeking to block them from being implemented.
The Supreme Court Monday paved the way for President Donald Trump's administration to conduct mass layoffs across the Department of Education without approval from Congress. The decision lifts a May injunction blocking Trump's executive order aimed at carrying out his campaign promise of closing the department. All three liberal justices dissented.
U.S. diplomats in Washington are bracing for cuts to the State Department workforce, with dismissal notices expected to hit inboxes as soon as Friday, according to three State Department officials with knowledge of the plans.