Federal Workers Brace for Mass Layoffs as Shutdown Looms
Thousands of federal workers are bracing for layoffs after the White House threatened mass firings if an agreement isn’t reached to avoid a government shutdown. The government will run out of money at midnight on Tuesday unless Democrats and Republicans agree on a funding bill. Although Democratic leaders are set to meet with President Donald Trump at the White House on Monday, the two sides are still a long way from a deal. Government shutdowns often result in furloughs and missed paychecks, but the matter has been complicated further after the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) directed federal agencies to use the shutdown as an “opportunity” to reduce their workforce, specifically in those departments that are not legally required to continue working. Read More: ‘Get Lost’: Democrats Refuse to Back Down in Shutdown Standoff as the White House Threatens Mass Firings That has left many federal workers preparing for the worst. “Of course, you become frugal with your spending, only buying what you need. You prepare for a furlough,” one park ranger who asked to remain anonymous for fear of retribution told TIME. “Except in this case, with Trump, you prepare to be unjustly laid off,” he added. Park rangers have been particularly hard hit this year. A Republican Bill signed by Trump in July clawed back $267 million of previously committed funding for national park staff, and the proposed 2026 budget includes “devastating cuts” to the National Park Service that would cut the workforce by over 5,000. The ranger who spoke to TIME is still dealing with the aftermath of mass layoffs orchestrated by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) that occurred earlier in Trump’s presidency, which prompted widespread condemnation from unions and workers. “Those weeks of limbo, not knowing what I’d do next to support myself were awful. It was one of the worst times in my life. Thinking about it gives me a horrible pit in my stomach, and I haven’t eaten well the past couple days because of it,” he told TIME. “It’s horrible to think it’s about to happen again.” The park ranger said they and fellow federal workers are being used as “chess pieces” by the federal government. He said he had refilled his medication early in case he loses his job this week. Federal workers were put on alert late last week when the OMB, led by Russell Vought, wrote in a memo that government departments should see the shutdown as an “opportunity to consider reduction in force.” That prompted anger from federal worker unions. “Federal employees are not bargaining chips. They are veterans, caregivers, law enforcement officers, and neighbors who serve their country and fellow Americans every day,” the American Federation for Government Employees said. “They deserve stability and respect, not pink slips and political games.” Read More: ‘A Government Shutdown Could Start Wednesday. Here’s How It Could Affect Your Life National Treasury Employees Union President Doreen Greenwald argued that the budget was being used “as a game of chicken with federal employees as the collateral damage,” while House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries called Vought “a malignant political hack.” Democrat leadership has sung a similar tune since the news dropped—they would not be “intimidated,” and still refuse to support the Republicans’ stop-gap bill unless the party reversed billions in cuts to Medicaid planned in the “Big Beautiful Bill,” restored funding to public broadcasting and foreign aid, and added millions of dollars of security funding for public officials. “These unnecessary firings will either be overturned in court or the administration will end up hiring the workers back, just like they did as recently as this week,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said.China economy weakens further in May as retail sales post first drop in over three years
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