USDA inspector-general escorted out of her office after defying White House
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Ms Phyllis Fong, a 22-year veteran of the USDA, was among 17 federal watchdogs fired by US President Donald Trump on Jan 24 in what critics described as a Friday-night purge.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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WASHINGTON - Security agents escorted the inspector-general of the US Department of Agriculture out of her office on Jan 27 after she refused to comply with her firing by the Trump administration, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.
Ms Phyllis Fong, a 22-year veteran of the department, had earlier told colleagues that she intended to stay after the White House terminated her on Jan 24, saying that she did not believe the administration had followed proper protocols, the sources said.
In an e-mail to colleagues on Jan 25, reviewed by Reuters, she said the independent Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency “has taken the position that these termination notices do not comply with the requirements set out in law and therefore are not effective at this time”.
Ms Fong declined to comment.
The White House defended the firing of Ms Fong and the other inspectors-general,
The USDA inspector-general has a broad mandate, pursuing consumer food safety, audits and investigations of the Agriculture Department as well as violations of animal welfare laws.
The USDA has been at the heart of concerns about bird flu, which has spread among cattle and chickens and killed a person in Louisiana.
In 2022, the inspector-general’s office launched an investigation of Mr Elon Musk’s brain implant startup Neuralink, which remains ongoing, sources said.
In recent years, the office has also taken on animal abuse at dog breeders for research laboratories and the listeria outbreak at Boar’s Head, among other issues.
Mr Musk spent more than a quarter of a billion dollars
Ms Fong was among the 17 federal watchdogs fired by Mr Trump on Jan 24 in what critics described as a Friday-night purge. Speaking to reporters afterwards aboard Air Force One, Mr Trump defended the move saying “it’s a very common thing to do”. He did not say who would be installed in the vacant posts.
The dismissals, handed out less than a week after Mr Trump took office for his second term, appeared to violate federal law, the Council of the Inspectors-General on Integrity and Efficiency said in a letter to the White House on Jan 24.
Ms Fong served as the first chairperson of CIGIE from 2008 through 2014, according to her biography on USDA’s website. REUTERS