Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge
Sinead McSweeney, Twitterâs Ireland-based global vice president of public policy, secured a temporary injunction from the High Court of Dublin to prevent her from getting fired, according to a report from The Irish Times. McSweeney claims she was locked out of her work accounts and Twitterâs Dublin office after not responding to the email Elon Musk sent to employees, which asked workers to reply âyesâ to commit to Twitterâs âextremely hardcoreâ culture, or otherwise leave.
Musk sent out the email shortly after his Twitter takeover on November 16th, and gave employees a little over a day to confirm whether they wanted to stay at the company. If an employee didnât click âyesâ on the form included in the email, Twitter said it would âtreat that as a resignation,â and then provide two monthsâ worth of payroll with benefits, along with one month of severance pay.
But McSweeney says she didnât hit âyes.â According to The Times, McSweeney never replied to the email because it didnât outline Muskâs expectations for employees who decided to stay, and the severance package didnât meet her âcontractual entitlements.â McSweeney later received an email confirming her âvoluntary resignationâ on November 18th.
While Twitterâs lawyers reportedly acknowledged that McSweeney wants to stay at the company and said they would restore access to her accounts, The Times reports that McSweeneyâs still locked out and unable to work. Justice Brian OâMoore granted McSweeney the injunction on Friday, which prevents Twitter from firing her but doesnât reinstate her employment. The court will revisit her case next week.
McSweeney isnât the only Twitter executive to face uncertainty about their employment. After Robin Wheeler, Twitterâs former head of ad sales resigned earlier this month, Musk convinced her to stay, but then ended up firing her anyway. McSweeney similarly says sheâs been getting âmixed messagesâ from Musk and that heâs been firing and rehiring employees âwith no apparent logic.â
Musk laid off about half of Twitterâs workforce earlier this month before he started asking some employees to come back. Earlier this week, The Vergeâs Alex Heath reported that Musk says heâs done with layoffs and that Twitterâs going to start hiring to replace the workers who were fired or quit.