BY Brenden AckermanMarch 9, 2026
1 month ago
BY 
 | March 9, 2026
1 month ago

Federal judge voids Voice of America layoffs, rules Kari Lake's appointment violated the Vacancies Act

A federal judge threw out mass layoffs at Voice of America on Saturday, ruling that Kari Lake's four-month stint leading the agency's parent organization was legally invalid from the start. Every personnel action she took during that window, including an Aug. 29, 2025, workforce reduction, now carries no legal weight, the Washington Examiner reported.

U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth, writing from the D.C. District Court, concluded in a 17-page opinion that Lake was ineligible to serve as acting CEO of the U.S. Agency for Global Media. The ruling means more than 1,000 journalists and support staff members could return to their jobs if the decision survives appeal.

Lake, a former television anchor, was elevated to the position on July 31, 2025, in an acting capacity and without Senate confirmation. She later relinquished it on Nov. 19, 2025. The judge determined that everything she did in between must be treated as void.

The Vacancies Act problem

The core of Lamberth's ruling rests on the Vacancies Act, which governs how the executive branch fills leadership positions on a temporary basis. Under the statute, an acting head must be the second senior officer of an agency, be appointed by the president with the Senate's consent, or be a senior officer who had been at the agency before a vacancy arose.

Lake met none of those criteria. She attempted to sidestep the issue by claiming she had not assumed the official title of acting chief executive, arguing instead that the authority of the position had merely been "delegated" to her. Lamberth rejected that argument, calling it:

"An unlawful effort to transform Lake into the CEO of U.S. Agency for Global Media in all but name."

The distinction Lake drew between holding a title and exercising a title's authority is the kind of bureaucratic wordplay that courts exist to see through. Lamberth saw through it. He wrote that allowing the president to circumvent "Congress's carefully crafted limitations" would violate the Constitution. The judge leaned heavily on a 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that similarly invalidated the appointment of Alina Habba, President Trump's former personal lawyer, to lead the U.S. Attorney's Office in New Jersey.

The real conservative concern

Here is where this story requires honest analysis rather than tribal reflex.

Conservatives rightly want to cut bloated bureaucracy. The federal government is overstaffed, underaccountable, and allergic to reform. USAGM, which oversees VOA and broadcasts in 49 languages to more than 360 million weekly listeners internationally, is not exempt from scrutiny. Lake billed herself as a reformer, and the impulse behind the appointment is one most conservatives share.

But the Vacancies Act exists for a reason, and it is not a liberal reason. It is a structural guardrail that prevents any president, of either party, from installing loyalists into Senate-confirmed roles through the back door. The same conservatives who would rightly object to a future Democratic president slotting an unconfirmed partisan into a powerful agency cannot wave away the same maneuver when their side does it.

The law is not the obstacle to reform. Ignoring the law is the obstacle, because it hands judges like Lamberth the authority to undo months of work with a single opinion. Every action taken outside the statutory framework becomes a gift to the other side's litigation strategy.

Lake responds, plaintiffs celebrate

Lake wasted no time framing the ruling in political terms:

"The American people gave President Trump a mandate to cut bloated bureaucracy, eliminate waste, and restore accountability to government."

She called Lamberth "an activist judge" and confirmed the decision will be appealed.

The plaintiffs, including VOA White House bureau chief Patsy Widakuswara, press freedom editor Jessica Jerreat, and USAGM's director of strategy and performance assessment Kate Neeper, issued a joint statement describing themselves as "vindicated and deeply grateful." They said the ruling represents:

"A powerful step toward undoing the damage she has inflicted on this American institution."

They expressed hope the decision would "restore V.O.A.'s global operations and ensure [they] continue to produce journalism, not propaganda." Operations have been shuttered since last March, nearly a year by the plaintiffs' account.

The propaganda question cuts both ways

That last phrase deserves a moment. VOA's defenders frame the network as an indispensable tool of American soft power, a beacon of press freedom broadcasting truth into authoritarian darkness. That is the legacy version of the story. Whether VOA in its current form lives up to that billing is a separate and legitimate question.

Government-funded media operations are not inherently conservative priorities. The right has long been skeptical of taxpayer-funded journalism, and for good reason. The question is not whether USAGM deserves reform. It does. The question is whether reform executed outside statutory authority will survive contact with the judiciary.

Saturday's ruling answered that question clearly.

What comes next

The appeal will likely land before the D.C. Circuit, where the administration will need to convince a panel that the delegation-of-authority argument Lamberth rejected has legal legs. The 3rd Circuit's ruling on Habba creates unfriendly precedent. Courts are not in a generous mood when it comes to creative readings of the Vacancies Act.

If the ruling holds, more than 1,000 former employees could theoretically return. The practical reality of reassembling an agency that has been functionally shuttered for nearly a year is another matter entirely. Bureaucracies are easier to dismantle than to rebuild, which is precisely why the dismantling should have been done by the book.

The mandate to reform government is real. The way to honor it is to execute it in a manner that no district court judge can unravel with 17 pages and a citation to the Vacancies Act.

Written by: Brenden Ackerman
Brendan is is a political writer reporting on Capitol Hill, social issues, and the intersection of politics and culture.

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