The Merit Systems Protection Board has existed for decades. It has long served as a place where Federal workers can find some measure of fairness. The MSPB addresses the question of whether a Federal employee has been fired for a fair reason. The MSPB is not particularly pro-employee. But, it serves a vital purpose for the workers who have been fired in violation of civil service rules. As I mentioned in a prior post, Federal workers are indeed held “accountable.” Project 2025 claimed otherwise. But, such a belief is farcical. See my prior post regarding Project 2025 and Federal workers here.
Early in his term, Pres. Trump fired several immigration judges. These are judges who would normally enjoy some protection from capricious or politically based firings. The administration simply cited as authority for the terminations the President’s Article II power under the Constitution. Two of those judges appealed the terminations to the MSPB: Megan Jackler and Brandon Jaroch. In a remarkable decision, the MSPB actually found that it has the authority to decide whether the MSPB has the authority to decide if Jackler and Baroch were entitled to civil service protection. Civil service protections under 5 U.S.C. §7513 do not prevent terminations. The statute simply requires due process, which in turn then imposes a duty on the Agency to document performance problems. Documenting job performance issues is not an onerous requirement. But, it does generally lead to a more professional, non-political workforce.
For decades, the MSPB had specifically refused to consider the constitutionality of its jurisdiction. Such a question represents a conflict of interest for the MSPB. The issue requires the MSPB to consider whether it ought to exist. The MSPB is made up of Federal employees. So, in essence questioning its jurisdiction over certainn workers undermines its own validity. Yet, suddenly in March,2026, it did indeed question its jurisdiction over a major group of Federal employees.
According to the New York Times, the acting chair of the MSPB, Henry Kerner, was called to a meeting with Trump administration officials. According to the Times report, those officials hinted that the MSPB should rule in favor of the administration regarding the two fired immigration judges, Jackler and Baroch. That meeting occurred in November, 2025, just a few months prior to the MSPB’s March, 2026 opinion. In attendance at that meeting with Chairman Kerner was James Sherk. Mr. Sherk has been preaching the false gospel that Federal employees are hard to fire since 2014. See the New York Times report here.
Mr. Kerner was one of two authors of the MSPB decision regarding Jackler and Baroch. If he did indeed meet with a representative of Department off Labor and a person from the White House Counsel’s Office and listened as they discussed a pending case, that would be a clear breach of the ethical rules all lawyers are bound by. Even simply meeting with them suggests the appearance of impropriety.
MSPB Judges not Protected
The MSPB decision dated March 20, 2026 found that immigration judges now qualify as “inferior officers,” such that the MSPB has sufficient authority that Congress cannot limit their removal. The MSPB ruled that simply based on the fact that immigration judges address an area of “significant consequence” for the country, involving foreign relations, the judges are inferior officers not subject to protections. But, as the Lawfare blog points out, this is not a factor that had ever played a role in the prior caselaw. In the few cases on this subject, the concern was the nature of the authority and its framework, not the subject matter.
The problem for this decision is that if it stands, hundreds of senior Federal officials and administrative judges will become subject to overt political pressure. Much of our non-partisan Federal workforce will become partisan. Administrative judges, career attorneys, scientists, IRS auditors would all become subject to the caprice of each changing administration. This decision has been appealed to the Federal Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C. That court has granted a rare en banc review. En banc means all the judges on the court will hear the appeal, not just a three judge panel.
See the Lawfare blog post here.
See the MSPB decision in Jackler and Baroch v. Dept. of Justice, No.. CF-0752-26-0069-1-1 (March 20, 2026) here.








