Politics
Trump’s ‘direct assault’ on MSPB ‘alarming’ to former board member Limon

Federal employees are going to the Merit Systems Protection Board in droves to push back against the agencies who fired them as part of a governmentwide purge of civil servants within their probationary periods.
In the last three weeks, MSPB has seen a surge of nearly 5,500 new cases from employees following the Trump administration’s mass terminations.
MSPB is an independent, quasi-judicial agency federal employees can turn to in the face of adverse actions from their agencies. The board hears and issues decisions on cases from federal employees that allege prohibited personnel practices.
But the MSPB is now on thin ice as it once again faces a possible loss of quorum. Member Raymond Limon’s retirement from the board on Feb. 28, coupled with President Donald Trump’s target on current MSPB member Cathy Harris, put the board at risk of losing its ability to issue decisions on employees’ appeals.
“That [risk] was not lost upon me,” Limon said in a recent interview with Federal News Network. “But these institutions are under such direct assault, even if I decided to stay on as another year until my position got replaced, there’s no guarantee that this administration still would not have used all of its efforts, as it’s doing now, to eliminate the board’s effectiveness. Whether I stayed or didn’t, it would not negate the attacks being launched upon the Merit Systems Protection Board by this administration.”
Limon likened MSPB’s role amid the Trump administration’s actions to the story of David and Goliath. The roughly 60 administrative judges at MSPB are reviewing thousands of employees’ adverse action cases that stem from the rapid and broad upheavals of the federal workforce.
“Where I saw myself starting in government 30 years ago, and thinking about where I would end up, I really thought that we would have come a long way,” Limon said. “But it just shows how hard it is to create something — and how easy it is to tear it all down. And that’s where we are today.”
Just days before his retirement, Limon granted a 45-day stay for the Office of Special Counsel to continue investigating the terminations of six federal employees, all from different agencies. The employees were removed as part of the governmentwide firings of probationary employees.
Although agencies said the firings were based on “performance,” OSC argued the terminations were a guise for conducting back-door reductions in force (RIFs), while circumventing required RIF procedures. Limon’s Feb. 26 decision showed there was a credible argument that the six firings were unlawful.
“Even though the entire record is not public, I did have access to the information that OSC investigators were looking at,” Limon said. “I had an opportunity to do a deeper dive into that information, and then ultimately come up with the decision to order the stay. I feel very comfortable with where we landed on that.”
OSC has been taking on a number of cases from recently terminated federal employees and turning to the MSPB to request various stays. In early March, MSPB member Harris similarly ordered a 45-day stay on the terminations of nearly 6,000 USDA employees. The decision temporarily reinstated the employees in their jobs while the OSC continues to investigate the agency’s actions.
Though Limon is no longer part of the board, he said Harris’ stay decision closely tracked with his own decision just a week earlier.
The similarities of the cases indicate more decisions may go in favor of fired probationary workers. Most recently, at a hearing Thursday, a federal judge ordered the reinstatement of tens of thousands of probationary federal employees who were fired from their jobs at the departments of Veterans Affairs, Treasury, Agriculture, Defense, Energy and Interior. Senior District Judge William Alsup ruled that the Trump administration unlawfully directed the mass firings of probationary workers.
Earlier this week, another federal judge also appeared skeptical that the governmentwide firings were based on performance, and instead seemed to believe employees were “terminated as a group in order to achieve a broader objective.” The judge is expected to issue a written decision “promptly.”
At the same time, broader cuts to the federal workforce still loom. All executive branch agencies are expected to deliver their initial plans for reductions in force (RIFs) to the White House by the end of the day Thursday. Widespread RIFs are expected to occur over the next several months.
Trump’s attempts to remove OSC, MSPB leaders “alarming”
OSC’s ongoing investigations of the probationary terminations are now hitting much rockier terrain. Trump fired Special Counsel Hampton Dellinger, OSC’s top leader, in February. The removal led to Dellinger suing the administration, arguing that the termination was unlawful. Although Dellinger was temporarily reinstated due to a federal judge’s decision, circuit court judges then decided to once again remove Dellinger from his position while the case continued.
“This new ruling means that OSC will be run by someone totally beholden to the President for the months that would pass before I could get a final decision from the Supreme Court,” Dellinger said in a statement last week. “The harm to the agency and those who rely on it caused by a special counsel who is not independent could be immediate, grievous and — I fear — uncorrectable.”
Following the appeals court decision last week, Dellinger resigned from his position at OSC and withdrew from his legal battle against the Trump administration.
Though Limon spoke with Federal News Network prior to the news of Dellinger’s withdrawal from the case, Limon still said he was “concerned” about the future of OSC — particularly when considering Trump’s simultaneous attempts to remove MSPB’s Harris.
Trump fired Harris in February, but she quickly sued over her removal. Harris was reinstated after a federal judge ruled the termination was illegal and issued a permanent injunction. Harris plans to continue through the rest of her term, which is set to expire in March 2028.
But the next steps in Harris’ lawsuit are still unclear. The Trump administration quickly filed an appeal on the judge’s decision reinstating her as a board member.
Under statute, a president can only remove a leader from an independent agency, such as MSPB, in cases of “neglect of duty, malfeasance or inefficiency.” But Limon said it’s clear that so far, Trump is taking a different path, rather than trying to exercise the authorities afforded to the president.
“It’s an alarming trend on what this administration is doing,” Limon said.
Although Dellinger’s case is now withdrawn, Limon said he expects to see Harris’ case make it all the way to the Supreme Court.
“It’s always important to me, when I look at the statutes that define our missions, what is the legislative history? What is the purpose? And what is the spirit of that law?” Limon said. “If the Supreme Court justices focused on strict language and legislative history, I believe there will be no choice but for them to keep Cathy Harris in her job.”
But Alsup, the federal judge who ordered the broad reinstatements of probationary employees on Thursday, expressed reservations about the MSPB’s ability to bring feds back to their jobs — particularly considering Trump’s ongoing efforts to remove MSPB’s Harris, and Dellinger’s recent departure.
If Trump is successful in removing Harris from the board, the MSPB would no longer have quorum, and its ability to issue adverse action decisions would come to a halt.
“I have a feeling that’s where it’s headed now — is to decimate the MSPB, get rid of the special counsel, and these employees will have no recourse,” Alsup said during Thursday’s hearing. “That troubles me.”
“If there is no ability to appeal and get … a real, effective way to undo the harm to these individual employees, I don’t see how this could be channeled,” Alsup continued. “I did rely upon the government’s representations that the MSPB was an effective remedy. I thought it was.”
Incoming flood of cases from fired employees
In the last three weeks alone, MSPB received nearly 5,500 new cases from federal employees. Limon said that level of rapid surge is uncommon, but not necessarily unprecedented. The board has managed similar scenarios in recent memory.
“Back in 2013, during sequestration, there were a lot of reductions in force or temporary layoffs occurring, in which thousands of employees brought their cases before the board,” Limon said. “Since then, we’ve experienced a 35-day government shutdown and thousands of appeals came in then as well.”
In those times of surge at the MSPB, the board has specific strategies to try to manage the flood. That can include, for instance, joining together similar cases to try to speed up the process, Limon explained.
“The administrative judges have a little bit of a tiger team approach, with certain judges hearing certain kinds of cases, or certain judges focusing a little bit more on whistleblower cases,” Limon said. “That’s just a way to help streamline the significant number of cases, so they can manage that big influx.”
Graph depicting weekly number of cases received in MSPB regional and field offices, fiscal 2025. Source: Merit Systems Protection Board.
MSPB’s roughly 200 staff members — about 60 of whom are administrative judges — conduct hearings, examine evidence, issue decisions and publish studies on the federal workforce. MSPB’s three-member board, with two positions currently filled by Chairman Henry Kerner and Member Harris, hear cases where employees appeal a decision on an adverse action.
“It’s a way where an employee has a chance to defend themselves, and it’s up to the agency to show why they are taking those actions,” Limon said.
MSPB was created in 1978 as part of the Civil Service Reform Act — the most recent legislation to significantly reform the civil service. The legislation enshrined protections for federal employees against prohibited personnel practices, set merit-based rules for federal employment, expanded labor-management relations, and created protections for federal whistleblowers.
“Imagine, at that time, coming out of the Watergate scandals, there was a need to establish checks and balances against the executive branch and to ensure that employees have an opportunity to have a level of due process, as well as to bring whistleblower complaints,” Limon said. “They wanted to have agency leads in a position to do their jobs without the fear and chilling effect of political retaliation.”
The board certainly has experience in dealing with floods of RIF appeals. But in other ways, Limon said the recent surge at MSPB is exceptional.
“Rather than using those tools that historically agencies have used to right-size, downsize or realign, they went right towards the removal of probationary employees,” Limon said. “That may create some new case law for the board.”
Trump’s actions on MSPB a “direct assault”
When the Senate confirmed Limon to his position as MSPB’s vice chairman in 2022, Limon took on the first and only political appointment of his 30-year federal career. During that time, MSPB spent several years working through a historic backlog of nearly 4,000 appeals cases, which piled up as the board went without a quorum for about five years between 2017 and 2022.
In late February, with his term on the board about to expire, Limon considered various options, including a possible one-year extension of his position on the MSPB. But he ultimately opted to leave his position due to a combination of personal and professional reasons.
“Using my experiences of how the federal government works and opening that up more transparently to people who are interested in getting a deeper sense of how the government works, I felt I could do that better from the outside of government than the inside,” Limon said.
In a statement on Limon’s retirement, MSPB’s Harris described him as a “consummate civil servant with a heart of gold.”
“We were so lucky to have his expertise, compassion and good cheer at the board,” Harris wrote in a Feb. 28 press statement. “Ray was instrumental in the adjudication of virtually the entire backlog in less than three years.”
Prior his role at MSPB, Limon held multiple career leadership positions at the Office of Personnel Management. He also spent 16 years on the Chief Human Capital Officers (CHCO) Council, while serving consecutively as the first-ever CHCO at the Corporation for National and Community Service, deputy CHCO at the State Department and CHCO at the Department of the Interior.
“I did have an inside look at the level of caliber, professionalism and commitment to the federal HR statutes at OPM,” Limon said. “It was the premier HR shop in federal government, by and large — and I say ‘was,’ because it breaks my heart to see that there have been so many career people now, by my understanding, who have all been pushed to the side. This current administration obviously is not listening to them.”
“To say that this is not normal is underselling the argument,” Limon added.
Despite his concerns for MSPB’s future, and the looming possibility of another loss of quorum, Limon still said he was hopeful the board will continue operating moving forward.
“If the Supreme Court does the right thing in understanding the legislative history and the purpose of the Merit Systems Protection Board, then I have a high level of confidence that we won’t lose a quorum, and they’ll continue to do the good work,” Limon said.
Limon also emphasized that federal employees’ work governmentwide is critically important. He encouraged feds to continue to serve the public, despite the Trump administration’s efforts to overhaul the federal workforce. At the same time, Limon pointed to the importance of due process rights and job protections afforded to civil servants.
“It is not easy to get hired into the federal government. It’s almost a minor miracle. You are there because you are the best in class for selection,” Limon said. “But please take the time and remind yourselves of the role of the Merit Systems Protection Board, the Federal Labor Relations Authority, the Office of Special Counsel, the inspectors general that are out there, to listen to you if you are being mistreated.”
The post Trump’s ‘direct assault’ on MSPB ‘alarming’ to former board member Limon first appeared on Federal News Network.
Politics
DECLASSIFIED: Democrat Whistleblower Warned FBI That Adam Schiff Authorized Leaking Classified Information to Destroy Trump During Russia Hoax – Swalwell Also Played a Role in the Leaks

An unidentified Democrat whistleblower told the FBI that then-Democrat Rep. Adam Schiff approved leaking classified information to smear Trump, according to newly declassified FBI 302 interview reports obtained by Just The News.
Beginning in 2017, the intel officer who worked on the House Intelligence Committee repeatedly told the FBI that Schiff authorized leaking classified information to destroy Trump during the Russiagate hoax.
The whistleblower said Democrat Rep. Eric Swalwell was likely the source of the classified leaks.
At the time of the leaks, Adam Schiff served as the ranking member (and later the chairman) of the House Intelligence Committee. Schiff is now a US Senator for California.
The Gateway Pundit repeatedly reported on Schiff’s leaks to the media during the Trump-Russia witch hunt.
According to the newly declassified FBI report, DOJ officials did not show any interest in probing Schiff over his illegal leaks.
The whistleblower told the FBI as recent as 2023 that he personally witnessed Adam Schiff approve the leaking of classified information.
“When working in this capacity, [redacted staffer’s name] was called to an all-staff meeting by SCHIFF,” the interview report said, according to Just The News. “In this meeting, SCHIFF stated the group would leak classified information which was derogatory to President of the United States DONALD J. TRUMP. SCHIFF stated the information would be used to indict President TRUMP.”
The whistleblower also told federal agents that Schiff was promised the posiition as CIA Director if Hillary Clinton won the 2016 election.
The Democrat whistleblower was abruptly fired for reporting Schiff’s leaks to the FBI.
Just The News reported:
A career intelligence officer who worked for Democrats on the House Intelligence Committee for more than a decade repeatedly warned the FBI beginning in 2017 that then-Rep. Adam Schiff had approved leaking classified information to smear then-President Donald Trump over the now-debunked Russiagate scandal, according to bombshell FBI memos that Director Kash Patel has turned over to Congress.
The FBI 302 interview reports obtained by Just the News state the intelligence staffer — a Democrat by party affiliation who described himself as a friend to both Schiff, now a California senator, and former Republican House Intelligence Chairman Devin Nunes — considered the classified leaking to be “unethical,” “illegal,” and “treasonous,” but was told not to worry about it because Schiff believed he would be spared prosecution under the Constitution’s speech and debate clause.
No publicly-disclosed opinion from the Attorney General or the Solicitor General can be found making that determination as a matter of law.
But officials told Just the News that DOJ officials showed little interest in pursuing Schiff when the allegations were brought to them years ago, citing the very same excuse the lawmaker had offered.
Read the full report by Just The News here.
We found it. We declassified it.
Now Congress can see how classified info was leaked to shape political narratives – and decide if our institutions were weaponized against the American people. pic.twitter.com/PCpLFLuPmI
— FBI Director Kash Patel (@FBIDirectorKash) August 12, 2025
The post DECLASSIFIED: Democrat Whistleblower Warned FBI That Adam Schiff Authorized Leaking Classified Information to Destroy Trump During Russia Hoax – Swalwell Also Played a Role in the Leaks appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
Politics
WashPost Editorial Board Complains Illegal DACAs Might Have to Pay Higher College Tuition, yet their Readers Disagree

The U.S. Department of Education has opened investigations into five universities for offering scholarships that exclude U.S. citizens and legal residents in favor of undocumented students, including recipients of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program.
The Washington Post’s editorial board complained about this today, saying that ‘helping undocumented students’ to ‘afford’ higher education ‘isn’t discrimination.’
The Trump Administration is arguing in court that prioritizing illegal aliens over American citizens is discriminatory against American students based on the protected class of ‘national origin.’
The Post utilizes several often-used left-wing memes related to immigrants, namely that these workers will ‘do the jobs Americans won’t do’ when it said: “The American Immigration Council reports that many of them go on to fill essential roles in health care, education and tech — sectors facing urgent workforce shortages.” The Post also uses the ‘diversity is our strength’ meme, when it says, “These immigrants make universities — and the country — richer, stronger and more intellectually vibrant.” The Post also uses the left-wing meme of ‘cost the U.S. government far less than they contribute, financially and otherwise,’ which has been repeatedly disproven.
The median federal student-loan balance held by U.S. citizen borrowers who attended government colleges is roughly $30,000 presently. The average cost of college tuition & fees at public 4-year institutions has risen 141.0% over the last 20 years.
Even in the comments attached to the Washington Post article, their own left-wing readers are not happy with their editorial stance. The Post’s own “AI-generated summary” of the comments characterizes that they “predominantly express strong opposition to universities providing scholarships to undocumented students” and summarize the comments as saying it’s unfair to prioritize non-citizen illegals over American citizens.
Even though the readership demographics of the Washington Post skew heavily left, with 59% identifying as liberal/progressive and only 11% as conservatives, their own readers were upset and angry with the paper’s position supporting illegal aliens over American kids:
State schools are typically heavily subsidized by state governments with tax dollars to provide lower-cost options for residents. The policy goal is to provide high-quality education to citizens who cannot afford it, but left-wing activists in college administrations and in the federal government, have been steering resources to illegal immigrants and their children instead.
The media typically refers to these children of illegals as “Dreamers,” a nickname that comes from the proposed DREAM Act (Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors), a never-passed bill that aimed to give certain undocumented immigrants brought to the U.S. as children a path to legal status.
The universities under investigation are:
- University of Michigan
- University of Louisville
- University of Nebraska Omaha
- University of Miami
- Western Michigan University
The investigations follow complaints from the Legal Insurrection Foundation, which argues that such scholarships violate Title VI of the Civil Rights Act by discriminating on the basis of national origin.
At the University of Michigan, the “Dreamer Scholarship” awarded $100,000 in 2023–2024 to undocumented students. The school distributed $855 million in total financial aid during the same year.
Undocumented students are ineligible for federal financial aid and typically rely on state support, institutional aid, and private scholarships. Several states, including Texas and Florida, have recently repealed laws granting in-state tuition to undocumented students.
There are an estimated 528,000 DACA recipients under age 18 at present according to federal data. Estimates of the total number of illegal immigrants in America range from 17 million to 29.5 million, with 7 million entering the country since Joe Biden’s Presidency started.
The Washington Post’s editorial board criticized the investigations, describing them as “absurd” and “cruel,” and argued that undocumented students contribute to the economy and fill roles in sectors facing worker shortages.
By taking heavily subsidized in-state tuition spots, accessing need-based and “Dream” grants, and enrolling without generating the federal reimbursements on which colleges depend, illegals simultaneously crowd out citizen students, shift fixed overhead onto the remaining reimbursable pool, and trigger new capital projects that are financed through higher tuition and fees, so every American on campus ends up paying a hidden surcharge that often runs into thousands of dollars annually.
Part of the media’s messaging on illegal immigration is to constantly claim, without evidence, that illegals are always cost-neutral or ‘pay their share of taxes.’ Yet studies show that illegal aliens are major ‘fiscal drains’ on the country’s public revenues. Estimates are that every illegal costs the country $10,400 per year, significantly depleting funds for K-12 education, hospitals, Medicaid, among other public assistance programs.
The Education Department has not announced when the investigations will conclude.
The Washington Post has an estimated daily circulation of 110,000, and 135,000 for its Sunday edition, and an estimated 2 million total subscribers both digital and online. It is owned by Amazon billionaire Jeff Bezos, who operates an Amazon PAC that gives equally to both parties. Amazon employees have historically given 85% of their campaign donations to Democrats. The Post endorsed Hillary Clinton in 2016, Joe Biden in 2020, and Kamala Harris in 2024, through a signed piece and not through the editorial board.
The post WashPost Editorial Board Complains Illegal DACAs Might Have to Pay Higher College Tuition, yet their Readers Disagree appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
Politics
Trump-Hating Billionaire Mark Cuban Roasts AOC, Bernie, Schumer, and Warren — Says They Should Be Thanking Trump for Pulling Off a Corporate Tax Move Democrats “Could Never Pull Off”

Credit: Gage Skidmore / X
President Donald Trump has struck a groundbreaking deal with semiconductor giants Nvidia and AMD that will pour millions into America’s coffers, and it’s triggering all the right people.
According to the Financial Times, Nvidia and AMD have agreed to hand over a staggering 15% of their revenues from high-end chip sales to China as part of a special arrangement with the Trump administration. The deal was a condition for granting export licenses for their top-tier chips, Nvidia’s H20 and AMD’s MI308, to the Chinese market.
The move is essentially a “sales tax” on some of America’s largest tech firms for doing business with Beijing, and the money will go straight to the U.S. government.
But while the far-left media is still scrambling to figure out how to spin this as “bad for democracy,” one unlikely voice, Trump-hating billionaire Mark Cuban, just lit up the Democrats for failing to achieve what Trump just did in one stroke.
Cuban, who has spent years trashing Trump, took to X to roast far-left darlings Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Sen. Bernie Sanders, Sen. Chuck Schumer, and Sen. Elizabeth Warren:
Hey @AOC, @BernieSanders, @SenSchumer, @SenWarren, every Dem should be thanking @potus for doing what the Dems have dreamed of doing, but have NEVER been able to do, creating a sales tax on 2 of the biggest semi companies in the country ! This opens the door for Sales Tax for export licenses on EVERYTHING!
He is going to generate corporate tax revenue that you guys only wish you could pass. You should be thanking him all day, every day for this brilliant move you guys couldn’t ever pull off !
In the future, don’t call it a tax, call it a Commission for America. BOOM!
Hey @AOC , @BernieSanders , @SenSchumer , @SenWarren , every Dem should be thanking @potus for doing what the Dems have dreamed of doing, but have NEVER been able to do, creating a sales tax on 2 of the biggest semi companies in the country ! This opens the door for Sales Tax…
— Mark Cuban (@mcuban) August 11, 2025
In another post, Cuban wrote:
This is a “billionaire’s tax” structured as a royalty or sales tax on semiconductors from the most valuable company in the world, sold to China.
While it’s scary on a lot of levels to businesses and entrepreneurs, it’s what @aoc, @BernieSanders and @SenWarren should have thought of. They are so intent on income and wealth taxes on “oligarchs”, they have no concept of leverage in business. Trump does.
Potus is more progressive when it comes to taxation than anyone in the progressive wing of the Dems has ever been. The Dems should be celebrating just how progressive it is. The irony.
If Dems celebrated this as they should, republicans would be so confused. lol.
He wants to grab whatever revenue he can from our biggest businesses, which are owned by … wait for it … billionaires. He knows they will pay for something he has, that they need. in order to grow their companies. That’s understanding leverage
He took 15 pct of equity from a company. That is the ULTIMATE wealth tax. He diluted every shareholder, upfront , regardless of their net worth. Lol. A progressive dream !
Everyone knows how I feel about POTUS, but he doesn’t get everything wrong.
Tariffs are bad. They kill small businesses and entrepreneurs. A group he never talks about. He is dead wrong here.
And I disagree on most of the non-business things he does.
But when it comes to tax revenue generation , as I’ve said to many Dems over the last 12 months, if you want to generate revenue from the richest of us, give them incentives to give you money and do the right thing. Particularly for their businesses.
Trump gave nvidia incentives to pay probably 4b and growing per year, know that created 25b or more in high margin revenue.
Will this make up for the explosion of the deficits we face ? Not as it stands now. Not close.
But give him credit for knowing how those CEOs approach problems and opportunities , and using his leverage to generate tax revenues .
This is a “billionaire’s tax” structured as a royalty or sales tax on semiconductors from the most valuable company in the world, sold to China.
While it’s scary on a lot of levels to businesses and entrepreneurs, it’s what @aoc, @BernieSanders and @SenWarren should have… https://t.co/OrqgwLvduW
— Mark Cuban (@mcuban) August 11, 2025
Translation: Cuban just admitted Trump outflanked the Left at their own game, taxing corporations, while protecting American interests abroad.
The irony is almost too perfect. The Democrats who scream about “corporate greed” and “making the rich pay their fair share” are now watching Trump make it happen in a way they never could, and with their biggest tech allies footing the bill.
The post Trump-Hating Billionaire Mark Cuban Roasts AOC, Bernie, Schumer, and Warren — Says They Should Be Thanking Trump for Pulling Off a Corporate Tax Move Democrats “Could Never Pull Off” appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
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