‘The rules … are not technicalities’: Trump has fired nearly 6,000 USDA workers in violation of federal civil service laws, watchdog says — as he, too, fights to keep job

Left: Donald Trump speaks at the annual Road to Majority conference in Washington, DC, in June 2024 (Allison Bailey/NurPhoto via AP). Right: Hampton Dellinger (Office of Special Counsel).

Left: Donald Trump speaks at the annual Road to Majority conference in Washington, DC, in June 2024 (Allison Bailey/NurPhoto via AP). Right: Hampton Dellinger (Office of Special Counsel).

Hampton Dellinger, a booted-then-reinstated Biden ethics enforcer who is currently fighting to keep his job in federal court, has started sounding the alarm on firings at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, with nearly 6,000 USDA workers officially getting their pink slips as of last week on the alleged basis that they weren’t “mission-critical” to the Trump administration.

Dellinger, who was appointed by Joe Biden in 2024 to lead the Office of Special Counsel and enforce whistleblower laws, filed a petition on Friday with the Merit Systems Protection Board asking it to stay the firings of approximately 5,900 probationary employees who were axed “without consideration of their individual performance or fitness for federal employment,” the document alleges.

“Rather … it did not identify their positions as ‘mission-critical,”” Dellinger writes. “USDA made no attempt to assess the individual performance or conduct of any of these probationary employees before deciding whether to terminate them … Whether USDA terminated each probationary employee therefore depended entirely on the nature of that employee’s position, not on the adequacy of their performance or fitness for federal service.”

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