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Trump re -enacts Mission of Justice Dept.'s civil rights office and asks the “Exodus”

Hundreds of lawyers and other employees leave the Ministry of Justice's civil rights, since the Veterans of the Office say that they were triggered by officials from the Trump Administration Management who want to drop his traditional work in order to aggressively pursue cases against Ivy League, other schools and liberal cities.

The departure wave has only accelerated in the past few days, since the administration reopened its “postponed withdrawal program” that would enable employees to withdraw, but continue to be paid for a certain period of time. The offer for those who work in the department runs on Monday. It is expected that more than 100 lawyers would take a number of earlier descents in the decimation of the ranks of a decisive part of the Ministry of Justice.

“Now over 100 lawyers have decided that they would rather not do what their job is asking, and I think that's okay,” said Harmeet K. Dhillon, the new head of the department, in an interview with the conservative commentator Glenn Beck over the weekend, welcomed sales and made the priorities of the department clear.

“We don't want people to have the feeling that it is their pet project in the federal government,” she said. “The task here is to enforce the federal laws of the federal government, not the ideology of the federal government.”

Traditionally, the department has protected the constitutional rights of minority communities and marginalized people, often by monitoring the police authorities on violations of civil rights, the right to protect the right and to fight against discrimination against living space.

In more than a dozen lawyers from the current and former civil rights department, the new administration not only seems to change the direction of work, as was typical when changing from a democratic government.

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