Trump offering federal workers buyouts with about 8 months' pay in
effort to shrink government
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[January 29, 2025]
By MARK SHERMAN and WILL WEISSERT
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration announced Tuesday that it is
offering buyouts to all federal employees who opt to leave their jobs by
next week — an unprecedented move to shrink the U.S. government at
breakneck speed.
A memo from the Office of Personnel Management, the government’s human
resources agency, also said it would begin subjecting all federal
employees to “enhanced standards of suitability and conduct” and
ominously warned of future downsizing. The email sent to millions of
employees said those who leave their posts voluntarily will receive
about eight months of salary, but they have to choose to do so by Feb.
6.
President Donald Trump has built a political career around promising to
disrupt Washington, and vowed that his second administration would go
far further in shaking up traditional political norms than his first
did. Still, the repercussions of so many government workers being
invited to leave their jobs were difficult to calculate.
Katie Miller, who serves on an advisory board to the Department of
Government Efficiency, a special Trump administration department headed
by Tesla CEO Elon Musk and tasked with shrinking the size of government,
posted on X, “This email is being sent to more than TWO MILLION federal
employees.”
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The federal government employed more than 3 million people as of
November last year, which accounted for nearly 1.9% of the nation’s
entire civilian workforce, according to the Pew Research Center. The
average tenure for a federal employee is nearly 12 years, according to a
Pew analysis of data from OPM.
Even a fraction of the workforce accepting buyouts could send shockwaves
through the economy and trigger widespread disruptions throughout
society as a whole, triggering wide-ranging — and as yet unknowable —
implications for the delivery, timeliness and effectiveness of federal
services across the nation.
Untold numbers of front-line health workers in the Veterans Affairs
Department, officials who process loans for homebuyers or small
businesses, and contractors who help procure the next generation of
military weaponry could all head for the exits at once. It could also
mean losing experienced food inspectors and scientists who test the
water supply — while disrupting everything from air travel and consumer
product protections.
In response, American Federation of Government Employees union President
Everett Kelley said it should not be viewed as voluntary buyouts, but
pressuring workers not considered loyal to the new administration to
vacate their jobs.
“Purging the federal government of dedicated career federal employees
will have vast, unintended consequences that will cause chaos for the
Americans who depend on a functioning federal government,” Kelley said
in a statement. "Between the flurry of anti-worker executive orders and
policies, it is clear that the Trump administration’s goal is to turn
the federal government into a toxic environment where workers cannot
stay even if they want to.”
In its emailed memo detailing its plan, OPM lists four directives that
it says Trump is mandating for the federal workforce going forward —
including that most workers return to their offices full-time.
“The substantial majority of federal employees who have been working
remotely since Covid will be required to return to their physical
offices five days a week,” it reads. That echoes Trump, who said of
federal employees over the weekend: “You have to go to your office and
work. Otherwise you’re not going to have a job.”
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President Donald Trump greets a Marine Corps honor guard as he
disembarks Marine One upon arrival on the South Lawn of the White
House in Washington, Monday, Jan. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Rod Lamkey,
Jr.)
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The memo also says Trump “will insist on excellence at every level,” and
while some parts of the government's workforce may increase under his
administration, “The majority of federal agencies are likely to be
downsized."
Finally, it says, the ”federal workforce should be comprised of
employees who are reliable, loyal, trustworthy, and who strive for
excellence in their daily work."
“Employees will be subject to enhanced standards of suitability and
conduct as we move forward,” the memo reads.
The emailed message includes a “deferred resignation letter” for federal
employees to begin leaving their posts.
“If you resign under this program, you will retain all pay and benefits
regardless of your daily workload and will be exempted from all
applicable in-person work requirements until September 30,” it says.
The email even includes instructions on how to accept, stating: "If you
wish to resign: Select ‘Reply’ to this email. You must reply from your
government account." It adds: “Type the word ‘Resign' into the body of
this email and hit ‘send.’"
Meanwhile, OPM has released guidance for an executive order Trump signed
on the first day of his second term known as “Schedule Career/Policy.”
It replaces Schedule F, an order Trump signed late in his first term
that sought to reclassify thousands of federal employees and make them
political appointees without the same job security protections.
President Joe Biden rescinded Trump’s Schedule F order almost
immediately upon taking office in 2021, and under his administration,
OPM issued a new rule last year designed to make it more difficult to
fire many federal employees.
That move was seen as a safeguard against using a new Schedule F order
to help carry out the key goals of Project 2025, a sweeping plan by a
conservative Washington think tank to dismiss large swaths of the
federal workforce in favor of more conservative alternatives while also
cutting back on the overall size of government.
But that hasn’t stopped the Trump administration from swiftly moving to
gut the federal workforce and leave employees with little recourse to
protest firings or reassignments.
Trump’s OPM on Monday set deadlines for agencies to begin to recommend
workers for reclassification. Agency heads are being instructed to
establish a contact person no later than Wednesday and begin to submit
interim personnel recommendations within 90 days.
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“Agencies are encouraged to submit recommendations on a rolling basis
before this date,” Charles Ezell, the acting director of OPM, said in a
memo.
Perhaps more stunning, the Trump personnel office simply did away with
the Biden administration’s 2024 regulation to better protect federal
workers. Monday's memo said Trump's new executive order used the
president's authority “to directly nullify these regulations.”
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Associated Press writers Zeke Miller and Lisa Mascaro in Washington and
Brian Witte in Annapolis, Maryland, contributed to this report.
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