The Trump administration is putting USAID staffers on leave worldwide
and firing at least 1,600
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[February 24, 2025]
By ELLEN KNICKMEYER
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration moved its fast-paced
dismantling of the U.S. Agency for International Development toward what
appeared to be its final phases, telling all but a fraction of staffers
worldwide that they were on leave as of Monday and notifying at least
1,600 of the U.S.-based staffers they were being fired.
The move was the latest and one of the biggest steps in what President
Donald Trump and cost-cutting ally Elon Musk say is their goal of
gutting the six-decade-old aid and development agency in a broader
campaign to slash the size of the federal government.
The move comes after a federal judge on Friday allowed the
administration to move forward with its plan to pull thousands of USAID
staffers off the job in the United States and around the world. U.S.
District Judge Carl Nichols rejected pleas in a lawsuit from employees
to keep temporarily blocking the government’s plan.
“As of 11:59 p.m. EST on Sunday, February 23, 2025, all USAID direct
hire personnel, with the exception of designated personnel responsible
for mission-critical functions, core leadership and/or specially
designated programs, will be placed on administrative leave globally,”
according to the notices sent to USAID workers that were viewed by The
Associated Press.
At the same time, the agency said in the notices to staffers that it was
beginning a firing process called reduction in force that would
eliminate 2,000 U.S.-based jobs. A version of the notice posted later on
USAID's website put the number of positions to be eliminated lower, at
1,600.
The administration gave no explanation for the discrepancy. USAID and
the State Department did not immediately respond to messages seeking
comment.
Within hours of that notice, individual staffers began reporting
receiving the notices of their upcoming dismissal under the reduction in
force.
The Trump appointee running USAID, deputy administrator Pete Marocco,
has indicated he plans to keep about 600 mostly U.S.-based staffers on
the job in the meantime, in part to arrange travel for USAID staffers
and families abroad.
The move escalates a monthlong push to dismantle the agency, which has
included closing its headquarters in Washington and shutting down
thousands of aid and development programs worldwide following a freeze
on all foreign assistance. A judge later temporarily blocked the funding
freeze. Trump and Musk contend that USAID's work is wasteful and
furthers a liberal agenda.
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Lawsuits by government workers' unions, USAID contractors and others
say the administration lacks the constitutional authority to
eliminate an independent agency or congressionally funded programs
without lawmakers' approval.
The Trump administration efforts upend decades of U.S. policy that
aid and development work overseas serves national security by
stabilizing regions and economies and building alliances.
The notices of firings and leaves come on top of hundreds of USAID
contractors receiving no-name form letters of termination in the
past week, according to copies that AP viewed.
The blanket nature of the notification letters to USAID contractors,
excluding the names or positions of those receiving them, could make
it difficult for the dismissed workers to get unemployment benefits,
workers noted.

A different judge in a second lawsuit tied to USAID said this past
week that the administration had kept withholding foreign aid
despite his order temporarily blocking the funding freeze and must
restore the funding to programs worldwide.
The separate ruling from Nichols, a Trump appointee, on Friday also
cleared the way for the administration to start the clock on a
planned 30-day deadline for USAID staffers and their families to
return home if they want their travel paid for by the government.
The judge said he was satisfied by Trump administration assurances
that workers abroad would be allowed to stay in their jobs while on
leave beyond the 30 days even if they chose to remain overseas.
Foreign staffers fear that continued problems with funding flows and
the gutting of most of the headquarters staff will make a safe and
orderly return difficult, especially those with children in school,
houses to sell and ill family members.
USAID's notice Sunday said it was “committed to keeping its overseas
personnel safe” and pledged not to cut off USAID staffers abroad
from agency systems and other support.
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