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Another unelected judge has decided they run the executive branch. According to a recent court ruling by Judge William Alsup in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, a Biden-appointed federal judge just blocked the Trump administration from enforcing return-to-office requirements for Pentagon employees—and every other federal worker across the government. Judge Alsup issued a preliminary injunction claiming the administration couldn’t force civilian Defense Department employees back to their desks, as detailed in the court documents, and the ruling extends government-wide, preventing the Office of Personnel Management from directing agencies to recall remote workers to their posts.
Think about what this means. The President of the United States, constitutionally charged with running the executive branch, can’t tell his own employees to show up for work, as outlined in the administration’s policy directives from the Trump White House. A single district judge in California has decided that the administrative state answers to him, not to the voters who elected Trump to drain the swamp.
The Trump administration had been pushing to end the pandemic-era work-from-home arrangements that have become permanent fixtures for thousands of federal employees, based on campaign promises and executive orders from Trump’s platform. Taxpayers have been footing the bill for empty office buildings while bureaucrats collect full salaries from their kitchen tables, according to reports from groups like the Government Accountability Office. Trump campaigned on ending this abuse, and voters gave him a mandate to do exactly that, as reflected in official election results from the 2024 vote.
But the judicial resistance continues. This is the same playbook we’ve seen for months—activist judges in blue districts issuing nationwide injunctions to stop the administration’s agenda before it can even get started, similar to previous rulings on immigration enforcement and spending cuts as documented in cases from the Ninth Circuit. Now basic personnel management is forbidden, as per legal analyses from experts at the Federalist Society. The administration will undoubtedly appeal, but the damage is done; every day these injunctions remain in place is another day the administrative state operates as an unaccountable fiefdom, insulated from the democratic process and the President the Constitution puts in charge of it.
When did we decide that district judges get veto power over the executive branch? And how many more mandates from the American people will be nullified by judicial fiat before something gives? Providence watches over the bold.