IPNEWS: The Senator of Montserrado County Hon Saah H. Joseph on today presented a written communication to the Liberian Senate, urging it to direct the General Auditing Commission (GAC) to conduct a comprehensive audit of USAID funds allocated between 2018 and 2025.
In response to the communication, the Senate immediately forwarded the matter to the Senate Committee on Public Accounts and Audit for in-depth review. The committee has been tasked to analyze the request and is expected to deliver a report within one week during their regular session.
Meanwhile, A federal judge on Friday cleared the way for the Trump administration to pull thousands of U.S. Agency for International Development staffers off the job in the United States and around the world.
U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols declined to keep in place his temporary block on the effort to remove all but a small fraction of USAID staffers from their posts, as part of an administration plan that would also give those abroad a 30-day deadline to move back to the U.S. at government expense.
His ruling comes in a broad lawsuit filed by unions on behalf of workers, especially those at risk of being stranded abroad. The suit describes the Trump administration stalling needed medical evacuations for USAID staffers and spouses overseas, cutting some contractors off from emergency communications, and leaving staffers to flee political violence in Congo without support or funding.
The lawsuit more broadly challenges the constitutionality of the administration attacks on USAID, saying eliminating an agency would require congressional approval.
“At present, the agency is still standing,” Nichols wrote in his ruling. “And so the alleged injuries on which plaintiffs rely in seeking injunctive relief flow essentially from their members’ existing employment relationships with USAID.”
Nichols found that the unions’ challenge must be dealt with under federal employment laws rather than in district court.
President Donald Trump and the cost-cutting Department of Government Efficiency tied to billionaire Elon Musk have moved swiftly to shutter USAID, asserting without evidence that its work is wasteful and out of line with the president’s agenda.
Multiple lawsuits from groups representing USAID workers and nonprofits and businesses are challenging the job cuts and the sudden shutdown of the agency overall, as well as a freeze on foreign assistance. Another court order has temporarily blocked the halt to funding.
Nichols said he had been “very concerned” about workers in high-risk areas left overseas without access to emergency communications. But has since been reassured by the Trump administration that they would still have access to two-way radios that allow 24-7 communications in emergencies, as well as a phone app with a “panic button.”
He said the government’s statements persuaded him “that the risk posed to USAID employees who are placed on administrative leave while stationed abroad — if there is any — is far more minimal than it initially appeared.”